Not getting enough sleep?
Put on an old CD and take a nap. It seems the BBC is encouraging people to put on an old CD while they nap. The logic is that even though we try to get some shut eye our minds are still too busy try to remember all the details from the day. As success is being measured by how much we can check off of our meta-to-do-list or how much data we can organize, sleep is constantly being placed farther down the priority list. I can certainly think of many nights tossing and turning obsessing over minute details, grouping and regrouping information into little neurofiles. By putting on one of those CDs you have memorized, you can successfully distract the mind enough while not giving it more to focus on. New ones won’t work we will focus on the lyrics and try to learn the melodies.
I can remember a time when I came home from school with the beginning of a migraine, went straight to my room and put on “Plastic Surgery Disasters” by the Dead Kennedy’s not good music for a headache, but I had the CD so memorized that it worked perfectly. I felt like it kept me contained, and has strong enough that my mind couldn’t focus on anything else. That’s exactly what an overstimulated person like myself needed. These days I would probably put something more mellow on, the Smiths maybe?
Another really interesting part of the article, comments on napping customs in the Japanese work place.
< Napping at work isn’t acceptable in the UK, but in Japan dozing anywhere from Parliament to business meetings is allowed. It’s called inemuri, which literally means “to be asleep while present”.
Japan’s ex-prime minister shows how it’s done |
The custom is partly a result of how commitment to a job is judged in Japan, says Dr Brigitte Steger. Inemuri is viewed as exhaustion from working hard and sacrificing sleep at night. Many people fake it to look committed to their job.
It’s a concept that seems bizarre in the UK but the Japanese are the ones who’ve got it right, says Dr Stanley.
“The Japanese are right in their assessment that you work better after a nap than before it. There’s a degree of machismo about it, you’re saying look how hard I’ve worked. But that’s better than the macho rituals we have over here, like how late you can send a work email to prove how long you’ve been working.”
Strict rules apply to inemuri. These include who is allowed to do it – only those high up or low down in a company – and how you do it – remain upright to show you are still socially engaged in some way.
“The rules are written nowhere but everyone knows them, they learn them culturally,” says Dr Steger.>
Man wish I could get away with that here. It takes looking busy at work in a whole other direction.
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Plenty of studies in the US have indicated that a break during the day to sleep, or even a mandatory nap policy, have shown significant increases in both productivity and overall worker output. There’s been a handful of companies that have started using these techniques. I think the key issue is the point you make about the difference in culture. Western culture values short-term achievements and benchmarks, so if you have to burn out a few employees to get there, so be it. Other cultures have more of a focus on the potential output of an employee over the life of their career, hence lower level employees are included inemuri. I think its a fundamental difference in how we view an individual’s contributions in a corporate environment.
Thomas Edison and Mark Twain were both noted for polyphasic sleep patterns and dozing off in social settings. It was also thought that DaVinci practiced this sleep method but nothing factual to back up that claim was ever found. In the January 08’ edition of WIRED there was a small blurb on polyphasic sleeping – basically living on 2 hours of sleep in a 24 hour period. The basic rule of thumb for this strategy was 20-minute naps every 4 hours. The idea behind it is that you reach REM in order to make the nap effective. Supposedly, it will take about a week for one to adjust to this type of sleep schedule. There was a study done by the journal Sleep that stated anything more or less then 20-minutes would leave you feeling groggy and restless.
Interestingly enough, according to that same study over the last couple of decade our average number of sleep hours in a 24-hour period has not changed significantly. Something like 0.7% decrease in the median minutes an average person sleeps in 24-hours. Makes one wonder who is getting all that extra sleep the rest of us are lacking?