Every so often I wake up earlier than planned and I feel absolutely wonderful for a few minutes. That is, until I fall back asleep for another hour or two and wake up to feel like I had barely gotten any sleep at all. What happened? I was just feeling so great. Wouldn’t more sleep help me more than hurt me?! It doesn’t seem right!
Does this happen to you?
Are human sleep patterns too difficult to pinpoint, document and optimize? I know I’m not the first one to have this type of experience on a regular basis and it seems like there should be some miracle reference for how to optimize sleep. If there is, please let me know and help me wonder why this isn’t something that’s taught to us as school children or provided to us by employers and academic organizations.
Maybe it’s the snooze button’s fault.
Update from chat conversation with Daniel Nicolas:
Daniel Nicolas: and so to lay down rules for when people have to go to bed - you’re naturally going to be against it Daniel Nicolas: i mean, i’m ready for bed ~ between 10am and 2am Zach Hale: it’s not WHEN to sleep Zach Hale: it’s how to gte the most out of sleep Zach Hale: just general guidelines Zach Hale: there’s nothing wrong with that i dont think Daniel Nicolas: yeah so what should be taught is Daniel Nicolas: the importance of sleep Zach Hale: yes. Daniel Nicolas: the idea that every body is different, thus you need to find out for yourself what your body actually needs Daniel Nicolas: the science behind sleep - the REM cycles, etc Daniel Nicolas: and then after all that a “Reality check” where you apply all this knowledge to life - if you have to work two shifts and you don’t get to sleep until 1am every night,… well you can’t just sleep through the natural cycle — so basically teaching people how to schedule their sleeping so they can get enough sleep, be happier, get more stuff done Zach Hale: exactly Zach Hale: it’s the science and how to use it to your advantage Zach Hale: thats what needs to be more widely known Daniel Nicolas: and this should be taught and reviewed in class at the beginning of every semester, from 1st grade through 8th grade, and then have specific required classes in high school every year
Posted on
September 30th, 2007 at 4:50 pm
My suggestion would be to get up while you’re feeling great. Then later in the day take a nap to make up for any “lost sleep”.
One thought is that you wake up naturally at the end of a REM cycle, and you feel great, but then if you fall back asleep again and then are forced to wake up in the middle, you put your body in shock and feel terrible.
It’s been a while since I’ve read and studied about REM cycles and length, but I do agree that people should be taught about it, and given the assignment to figure out how much sleep their body needs, and how long their REM cycle takes, etc. to figure out what their body needs to be highly productive and happy.
Posted on
September 30th, 2007 at 4:59 pm
Daniel: Thanks for that info. I’ll have to try that.
Like you’ve agreed it seems like something we should be taught. Sleep is such an essential part of our life that it only makes sense that it would be covered in schooling instead of leaving people to experiment with caffine and feeling like crap for getting very little sleep.
Maybe it’s a personal freedom issue. Is it that people don’t like being told what to do when they are younger and don’t want to be told how to sleep?
Or, maybe it’s something that should fall under the responsibility of parenting. If it does, somebody should publish some easy to access information on this subject and get it into the hands of new parents.
I’ve seen so much random information around the net talking about how to sleep properly that it seems like a fit candidate for a more official documentation of sorts.