The nature of our economy rewards people that keep their nose to the 
grindstone.   Locally it is a good optimization, but globally you work till you 
drop.   Maybe you go on a Viking River Cruise or something while you are 
reaching completion.    I have a lot of sleep momentum and require lots of 
coffee to get to the point where I assent to the internally posed question of 
"Why the f*ck would I want to do that?"  

On 4/9/19, 9:33 AM, "Friam on behalf of glen∈ℂ" <[email protected] on 
behalf of [email protected]> wrote:

    If you’re not sleeping at work, you should be fired
    
https://theconversation.com/if-youre-not-sleeping-at-work-you-should-be-fired-114006
    
    I'm skeptical of the argument that "we're" not getting enough sleep. Just 
this morning, after getting plenty of good sleep last night (helped along by 
some Peruvian chaufa), my exercise performance this morning was terrible ... 
whereas my "regular" night's sleep of 5 hours produced excellent performance 
over the last month or so.  Stories aside, by what measure(s) do we judge 
health, recovery, alertness, engagedness, etc ... the bait presented at the 
beginning of this article?
    
    Again, just for me, a nap destroys my productivity.  But aperiodic 
*distractions* seem to improve my productivity.  When I finish the first draft 
of a report, for example, it's good to go for a bike ride before the 2nd 
iteration. Taking a nap just makes me sleepy and want to watch TV.  However, 
when I am well (over?) rested like today, I tend to wax philosophical and am 
attracted by Deep Thoughts™. So, I can see why the gist of the article would 
match someone's intuition.  But intuition is not reliable.  The data I keep on, 
e.g., my weight lifting regimen seems to show that I perform better when I'm 
consistent, regardless of the amount of sleep I get.  When I get the same 
amount each and every night, then I perform better.  I don't keep data on my 
fugues into Deep Thoughts™, though ... maybe I should. 8^)
    
    
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