The Art - and Necessity - of Napping

Sir_Winston54

Assume the position!
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Jul 15, 2004
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I'm notorious among friends and loved ones for my propensity for napping. (And for extreme grumpiness when awakened at the "wrong" time.) Now, I have something I can wave in their faces when they snicker or grumble about my naps.

Napping: the expert's guide
A short snooze during the day will boost your mood and your intelligence - but there's more to it than simply closing your eyes
Jennifer Ackerman The Guardian, Tuesday 27 January 2009

For years, napping has been derided as a sign of laziness. We are "caught" napping or "found asleep at the switch". But lately it has garnered new respect, thanks to scientific evidence that midday dozing benefits both mental acuity and overall health. A slew of recent studies have shown that naps boost alertness, creativity, mood, and productivity in the later hours of the day.

A nap of 60 minutes improves alertness for up to 10 hours. Research on pilots shows that a 26-minute "Nasa" nap in flight (while the plane is manned by a copilot) enhanced performance by 34% and overall alertness by 54%. One Harvard study published last year showed that a 45-minute nap improves learning and memory. Napping reduces stress and lowers the risk of heart attack and stroke, diabetes, and excessive weight gain.

Getting even the briefest nap is better than nothing. A 2008 study in Düsseldorf showed that the onset of sleep may trigger active memory processes that remain effective even if sleep is limited to only a few minutes. And last year, a British study suggested that just knowing a nap was coming was enough to lower blood pressure.

Naps make you brainier, healthier, safer. But to understand how you can nap best, you need to understand your body.

• Jennifer Ackerman is the author of Sex Sleep Eat Drink Dream: A Day in the Life of Your Body

How long should you rest for?

In designing the optimal nap you need to grasp its potential components. During sleep, your brain's electrical activity goes through a five-phase cycle.

A short afternoon catnap of 20 minutes yields mostly Stage 2 sleep, which enhances alertness and concentration, elevates mood, and sharpens motor skills. To boost alertness on waking, you can drink a cup of coffee before you nap. Caffeine requires 20 or 30 minutes to take effect, so it will kick in just as you're waking. Naps of up to 45 minutes may also include rapid eye movement (REM) sleep, which enhances creative thinking and boosts sensory processing.

Limit your nap to 45 minutes or less, if you need to spring into action after dozing. Otherwise, you may drift into slow-wave sleep. Waking from this stage results in sleep inertia, that grogginess and disorientation that can last for half an hour or more.

But you might want to take a long nap, at least 90 minutes. Many of us get about an hour to an hour-and-a-half less sleep a night than we need. One recent study shows that the sleep-deprived brain toggles between normal activity and complete lapses, or failures, a dangerous state of slowed responses and foggy inattention. Sound familiar?

Naps of 90 to 120 minutes usually comprise all stages, including REM and deep slow-wave sleep, which helps to clear your mind, improve memory recall, and recoup lost sleep. Longer naps in the morning yield more REM sleep, while those in the afternoon offer more slow-wave sleep. A nap that is long enough to include a full sleep cycle, at least 90 minutes, will limit sleep inertia by allowing you to wake from REM sleep.

The science of sleep

Why do we need to nap?

Most mammals sleep for short periods throughout the day. Humans have consolidated sleep into one long period, but our bodies are programmed for two periods of intense sleepiness: in the early morning, from about 2am to 4am, and in the afternoon, between 1pm and 3pm. This midday wave of drowsiness is not due to heat or a heavy lunch (it occurs even if we skip eating) but from an afternoon quiescent phase in our physiology, which diminishes our reaction time, memory, coordination, mood, and alertness.

Are you a lark or an owl?

To determine the best time to nap, it helps to know your "chronotype". What time would you get up and go to sleep if you were entirely free to plan your day? If you're a lark, apt to wake as early as 6am and go to sleep around 9pm or 10pm, you're going to feel your nap need around 1pm or 1.30 pm.

If you're an owl, preferring to go to bed after midnight or 1am, and to wake around 8am or 9am, your afternoon "sleep gate" will open later, closer to 2.30pm or 3pm.​

I've said for years that children get an overabundance of two things they need much less than we (adults) do: Energy and naps. Now the experts have shown me to be correct. Gawd/ess, I'm good! :p

Having shared my wisdom for the day with the unwashed masses, I'm off to take a nap :) and then go to @#$%^&*(! PT.
 
This is interesting to me though, about the napping. At work.. I work in a control center that runs 24/7 and we rotate shifts monthly... At almost any time when it's a bit slow you may walk in and see someone apparently asleep at the console but in reality it is quite different and I also do the same thing.

After you get very attuned to the environment with all of the computer generated trouble alerts of which all have an audible beep component. Think C3P0 the little droid in star wars... We can nap but also remain highly alert to what is going on with our systems via hearing. It's very common to observe someone who appears to be deeply asleep to hear a soft beep and snap instantly to an alert condition for important things or to just simply crack an eye a bit, reach out for the mouse and clear nuisance or informational alerts.

I've also observed the same ability to nap while alert while I was in the Army as sleep was at a premium and I've even managed to nap while standing.

Also, at work we do also routinely try to sneak up and prank each other while napping. It seems a bit mean but it also serves to keep you alert and from really falling asleep. You can hear the timid footsteps of a person with nefarious intent coming and that bit of paranoia is what saves us from idiot managers.

It also seems that you can semi-nap sometimes.. it's like only part of your brain is asleep while the other is conscious but very relaxed.
 
I don't nap. Never have managed that skill. And I flat can't sleep while travelling. The only times I manage to nap are when I'm just shattered and have no choice. It's nap or collapse. Anything short of utter exhaustion and I'll just lay there more awake than when I lay down.
 
Seen it before, and tried it all. When it comes to naps, I sucketh.

I actually figured it out years ago, and, wow, it's stupid. Can't change it though. It's a control thing. If I am asleep, I am not in control. I am not on watch. I am not doing what I am supposed to be doing.

Every night, without fail, both viv and MIS are in bed well before I get there. I need to be certain that everything is right in our little world before I can relax enough to sleep, and part of that is knowing that they are both safely asleep. same with the kids. The cats get a pass, but only just barely.

If I am napping, I am not on point. Can't have that. Yeah, like I said, it's stupid.
 
I definitely do the napping judo, and I knew about 20 minutes, but never thought 90 would be ok too.

And if I'm on a train it's amazing, it's like the blanket has gone over the birdcage.
 
It's so bad for me that anaesthesiologists generally have to bump the mix a couple times to cope with my unwillingness to pass out. The last time I was told to count down from 100 I got to something like 84. At one point the anaesthesiologist looked into my eyes and incredulity was clear on his masked face.
 
I am also terrible at napping. The only times I have ever in my life been able to nap were when I was completely exhuasted, pulled an all-nighter, that sort of thing. Even then sometimes its really hard. I've tried all the handy tips and tricks but I just can't turn my brain off.
 
I am also terrible at napping. The only times I have ever in my life been able to nap were when I was completely exhuasted, pulled an all-nighter, that sort of thing. Even then sometimes its really hard. I've tried all the handy tips and tricks but I just can't turn my brain off.
It may have helped me to live in my youth less than a mile from an Army artillery range that often operated for as much as 72 hours straight (155-mm howitzers - they're loud). Then again, sleeping on an aircraft carrier in a compartment separated from the main engine rooms only by two half-inch steel bulkheads and a two-inch "air dam" that was supposed to reduce the noise of those humongous engines might have something to do with it, too. Regardless, I've been known to doze off on league bowling nights in between my turns to bowl, and at a pistol/rifle range at which every lane was occupied so that I needed to wait my turn.
 
i nap daily (or close enough) for an hour or so. its the only way i get through.

falling asleep isnt an art. the real art is waking up again afterwards.
 
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I've found two days without a nap leads to a very lovely nap every third day after lunch. It's like entering a parallel universe.
 
I rarely nap. Sometimes though, one will sneak up out of nowhere! Especially if I'm under the weather.

My grandmother napped. Of course, then she would complain that she couldn't sleep at night.
 
falling asleep isnt an art. the real art is waking up again afterwards.

So true.

I love to sleep. But when I take even the shortest nap, I have a hard time waking up afterward. And don't get me started on when I'm in class. Geez. I can be WIDE awake and the moment I walk in a classroom, it's like my brain says "Okie dokie, nap time." :rolleyes:
 
I rarely nap. Sometimes though, one will sneak up out of nowhere! Especially if I'm under the weather.

My grandmother napped. Of course, then she would complain that she couldn't sleep at night.

This is another reason I don't nap.

Remember how I said I don't nap unless I'm shattered? Well, I'm on the "Not quite dead yet" end of a case of walking pneumonia, so I'm pretty well beat down. I decided to lay down for a few minutes and read earlier, and wound up going to sleep for about 20 minutes ago. No biggy, right?

Nope. My body interprets a nap as a night's sleep. It's almost 4am, and I've been up since 7am yesterday. I am yawning, and am physically tired, but the brain is so very much awake. Tried going to bed and just boring myself to sleep. Nope. The body thinks that I woke up at 6pm, so it is WAY too early to go to bed.

Hates my sleep issues. Hates them.
 
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