1
0
Fork 0
forked from wezm/wezm.net
wezm.net/content/personal/2011/01/polyphasic-sleep-schedule.html

65 lines
2.7 KiB
HTML
Raw Normal View History

2011-01-20 16:08:58 +00:00
I've lamented the amount of time dedicated to sleep for many years now. There's
evidence of it as far back as 2001 where I included the following ["moto" on my
home page][moto]:
> "Sleep is the single biggest waste of time in life. Avoid it at all costs."
[moto]: http://web.archive.org/web/20010428064609/yallara.cs.rmit.edu.au/~wmoore/cgi-bin/index.cgi
I have lots of things that I'd like to do but due to the amount of time that
work and sleep occupy only get an hour here and there.
Around 2004 when I started working full-time I read about what is now known as
the Uberman sleep schedule. Under this sleep schedule all sleep is replaced by
six 20 minute naps across the 24 hour day. This sounded great but the schedule
had to be strictly stuck to and I didn't have an employer at the time that
would be ok with me taking naps through the work day.
Fast forward to last week during our weekly Monday meeting. My current boss,
[Matt][matt], announced he was going to start the Everyman 3 sleep schedule. In
this modified variant of the Uberman schedule there is a 3 hour core sleep and
three 20 minute naps distributed across the day. The inclusion of the core
sleep seems to provide a bit of flexibility in the required nap times
potentially allowing them to taken up to an hour either side of their scheduled
time.
[matt]: http://twitter.com/#!/matthewfallshaw
So with Matt starting a sleep schedule and me now working for a [nap friendly
company][trike] I've also decided to give the Everyman sleep schedule a try. My
schedule is as follows:
[trike]: http://trikeapps.com/
<table class="left_headers">
<tr>
<th>Core Sleep</th><td>11pm - 2am</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<th>Nap 1</th><td>7am</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<th>Nap 2</th><td>12pm</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<th>Nap 3</th><td>5pm</td>
</tr>
</table>
The way the sleep schedule works is that initially you become so sleep deprived
that at each of the nap times your body decides it best make the most of the 20
minutes of sleep it has available to it and skips the usual sleep phases and
jumps directly to the R.E.M. phase. R.E.M. sleep is what is mainly responsible
for recharging and fending off tiredness. Its also been reported that by
getting R.E.M. sleep across the whole day you wake up feeling really switching
on and alert and therefore potentially more productive. Wikipedia has a [good
summary on polyphasic sleep][wikipedia].
[wikipedia]: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polyphasic_sleep
Of course there is an adaptation phase for the schedule, which can be a couple
of weeks or more. As mentioned this basically involves driving yourself to
exhaustion to trigger R.E.M sleep in naps. Tonight is my first night on the
schedule so I'm in for some rough days ahead. I aim to post weekly updates on
my progress.