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secondwind

(16,903 posts)
1. Fascinating, but extremely long, I had to bookmark for later.
Wed Jan 19, 2022, 12:52 AM
Jan 2022

But VERY very interesting stuff there! Thanks for posting!

 

Basic LA

(2,047 posts)
3. Read Harlem Shuffle by Coleson Whitehead
Wed Jan 19, 2022, 12:59 AM
Jan 2022

The novel's hero adopts this ancient sleep method, much to his benefit.

KPN

(16,107 posts)
5. Some of us still do this, or at least it seems so when I look at DU at 2,3, or 4 at night after my
Wed Jan 19, 2022, 01:26 AM
Jan 2022

1st sleep. Usually, I read for anywhere between a half hour and 2 or even 3 hours before getting my second sleep. Been doing it for years. There are a lot of folks who post here in the middle of the night.

elleng

(136,071 posts)
6. I often post here 'in the middle of the night,' but
Wed Jan 19, 2022, 01:29 AM
Jan 2022

I usually haven't had my 'first sleep' yet; that will happen in an hour or so.

I DO sometimes 'nap' mid-day, and usually don't know for how long.

Haggard Celine

(17,025 posts)
8. I do it a lot.
Wed Jan 19, 2022, 01:38 AM
Jan 2022

I went to sleep about 8:30 and just got up about midnight. I'll go back to sleep about 4:00 and get up about 7 or 8 for the day.

dameatball

(7,603 posts)
13. Very interesting read. I find this pattern even more common post retirement. In general, I have
Wed Jan 19, 2022, 06:19 AM
Jan 2022

no need for clocks unless there is something out of the ordinary happening.

2naSalit

(92,705 posts)
14. I have always had those sleep patterns...
Wed Jan 19, 2022, 07:49 AM
Jan 2022

It made it difficult for some jobs I've had. Just like only being able to eat when I'm hungry, I can only sleep when tired enough to sleep and only for three to five hours at a time. Even though some claim you don't go into the dream state in that amount of time, I beg to differ. I fall into dreamtime easily, in minutes, and I often recall my dreams, even years later.

I agree with the hypothesis of natural sleep patterns being disrupted by the industrial revolution. I hope our species can wean itself off of many of the unnatural practices that are not healthy.

eppur_se_muova

(37,403 posts)
15. Thank you so much for posting this! Years ago, I heard an interview on NPR ...
Wed Jan 19, 2022, 09:53 AM
Jan 2022

... about the "watch(ing?) hour", and how people used to sleep in two shifts. I had thought "The Watching Hour" was the title of the book being discussed with its author, but I could never find a book by that title. Finally, I did come across the book mentioned in the BBC article, which is probably the same one, but haven't read it yet (it's quite long ).

My new word for the day is "cathemeral", meaning awake during both night and day. I guess it is the complement of "crepuscular", meaning active in the twilight hours, as cats are -- suggesting that cats and humans have naturally opposite circadian cycles.

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