How much sleep do you get?

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Arch

Married to Night Train
Location
Salford, UK
I am more likely, though not always, to sleep if I lay on the sofa after lunch with a film on. I will then miss maybe an hour or so of a film so I know I have slept then.

Not wishing to make light of your problems, but... My Mum sometimes sits down to have her lunch in front of the lunchtime news, and then falls asleep during afternoon telly. She says it's particularly discombobulating to go to sleep mid-Diagnosis Murder, and wake up mid-Murder She Wrote, and not know why all the suspects are slightly different - especially if it happens that the same bit part actor happens to be in both!

I'm afraid I sleep disgustingly easily, usually for about 7-8 hours. I do sleep with the radio on, a hangover from a time when I found it harder to get off to sleep, or would wake during the night. Having something to listen to helped me stress less about being awake.
 

Milo

Guru
Location
Melksham, Wilts
Not wishing to make light of your problems, but... My Mum sometimes sits down to have her lunch in front of the lunchtime news, and then falls asleep during afternoon telly. She says it's particularly discombobulating to go to sleep mid-Diagnosis Murder, and wake up mid-Murder She Wrote, and not know why all the suspects are slightly different - especially if it happens that the same bit part actor happens to be in both!

I'm afraid I sleep disgustingly easily, usually for about 7-8 hours. I do sleep with the radio on, a hangover from a time when I found it harder to get off to sleep, or would wake during the night. Having something to listen to helped me stress less about being awake.
I have to sleep with the radio tinnitus is a curse.
 

Night Train

Maker of Things
Not wishing to make light of your problems, but... My Mum sometimes sits down to have her lunch in front of the lunchtime news, and then falls asleep during afternoon telly. She says it's particularly discombobulating to go to sleep mid-Diagnosis Murder, and wake up mid-Murder She Wrote, and not know why all the suspects are slightly different - especially if it happens that the same bit part actor happens to be in both!
I got 10 minutes this afternoon. I put on tv something I recorded earlier on building super cars. They just introduced the designer talking about F1 carbon bodyshell and suddenly it went straight to '...and that's how we get a super car body.'. I rewound and found it was only 10 minutes.
 

Arch

Married to Night Train
Location
Salford, UK
I have to sleep with the radio tinnitus is a curse.


Do you ever find you've dreamt something and it turns out to have been the news just before you woke up? Weird deja vu moments ensue when you think you've predicted the news!
 

Milo

Guru
Location
Melksham, Wilts
I once dreamed I was riding a horse on the steppe to be awoken by some crazy Hungarian (or something similar) folk music playing on that world music program on the world service.
 

yoyo

Senior Member
Night Train,

Have you tried melatonin - you can buy it online. All the alternative practitioners regard it as good stuff. I am an unsomniac and this is what gives me six hours almost guaranteed.

I hope you get sorted soon.
 

marafi

Rolling down the hills with the bike.
Go to sleep either 10pm or 11pm it depends if its a uni night or not. Wake up at 6.00 pray and then go to sleep then wake up again at 7 or i stay away. Again it depends if work, or to study or its a uni night. I get 6-8 hours a day of sleep.

I had a dream i was beening chased by mice. Not that i dont mind one though too many of them its freaky. And that was when i had 5 hours of dream not the best night i had.. lol
 

paddy01

Senior Member
Location
Exmouth (Devon)
The adaptability of the human body also never fails to amaze me. My wife is seriously into her sleep. Most nights she'll have dozed off on the sofa by 9.30 until I throw cushions at her for snoring, then would be up to bed and straight back to sleep in an instant until 7am.

We've just had our first child who's now 8 weeks old, so her old pattern is a distant memory. For the first 2 to 3 weeks she was wrecked in a morning however by weeks 4 to 5 her body had adapted to the reduction in sleep and she's now operating at least around 95% on what some nights can be half the sleep she used to have.
 

goo_mason

Champion barbed-wire hurdler
Location
Leith, Edinburgh
Usually put the light out at about 11.15 - 11.30, then up at 5.25 if I'm cycling in. Non-cycling work days I get up at 5.55am.

Fridays - not usually asleep until 1.00am Sat mornings, then up again at 7.55am.

Saturdays - same again; light off about 1am Sunday morning, but I get a lie-in until 10.30 unless the cat ignores my daughter (up early) and decides to sit outside my bedroom door yowling for as long as it takes to wake me :-(

Tonight I'm off to bed early as it's cold in here, I'm in the middle of a great book I want to read more off, and there's nowt in the telly worth staying up watching.
 

swee'pea99

Squire
The adaptability of the human body also never fails to amaze me. My wife is seriously into her sleep. Most nights she'll have dozed off on the sofa by 9.30 until I throw cushions at her for snoring, then would be up to bed and straight back to sleep in an instant until 7am.

We've just had our first child who's now 8 weeks old, so her old pattern is a distant memory. For the first 2 to 3 weeks she was wrecked in a morning however by weeks 4 to 5 her body had adapted to the reduction in sleep and she's now operating at least around 95% on what some nights can be half the sleep she used to have.

Indeed. We are creatures of habit, and our bodies get used to our routines.

When I was unemployed for a few months, I got into the habit of going to bed in the early hours and waking up late. It was the middle of the winter, and I sometimes went days at a time without seeing daylight. When I got a job, I still went to bed very late, but now I had to get up in the mornings. Having survived an initial groggy fortnight or so, I was functioning just as well and was just as wide awake on a regular 6 hours sleep a night as I'd been only a month before on 10-11 hours.

(In a vaguely analogous sense, I discovered when I was travelling that I used to get hungry at mealtimes, but if I didn't have and couldn't get any food, I could just ride it out, and after an hour or so, when it was no longer 'lunchtime', my body would sort of shrug its shoulders, accept that that was that, and give up. The feeling of being hungry would simply fade away, and I wouldn't start to get hungry again until dinner time.)
 
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