That makes sense.  Actually, hunh.  like cats and most other hunting animals.

I wonder what type of sleep schedule our primitive ancestors had.

On Sun, May 31, 2009 at 6:07 PM, William Beaty <bi...@eskimo.com> wrote:
> On Sun, 31 May 2009, leaking pen wrote:
>
>> on the uberman sleep schedule... im confused...
>
> Different groups seem to worship different schedules.
>
> As for me, I found that I'd be happily working away, when suddenly I'd
> "hit a wall."  I'd have to crawl off to collapse somewhere for a few
> minutes REM sleep.  But then it would pass, and I'd leap up and go strong
> for several more hours.  A fast-cycling biological clock, no theories,
> just empirical.  And once this phenomenon grabbed me, it continued without
> further effort.  However, to switch back to 8hr nightly sleep, *huge*
> effort was needed.  (In a different situation we might say "insomnia is no
> joke.")
>
> I also found what NOT to do:  if I kept working through the haze, I'd wake
> up again, and could continue for hours.  But the missed naps had bad
> effects, both healthwise and for avoiding something resembling
> schitzophrenia.  So I learned to take the onset of groggyness very
> seriously, and not skip any naps, even if I was supposed to be in a
> work meeting, etc.
>
>
>> After moving a couple years ago, i had a LOT of laundry to do.  to get
>> through it all, i spent 3 days setting my alarm clock at roughly hour
>> intervals.  get up with the alarm, change dryer and washer loads, fold
>> clothes, back to sleep for an hour.  I got about 6 actual hours of
>> sleep a night, and fantastic sleep.  Why spread it through the day?
>> why not just artificially "reset" your sleep schedule by waking up for
>> 10 to 15 ever 40 minutes or so?
>
> Once you get into that mode, you start sleeping and waking naturally with
> no alarm clocks.   But sleeps might be 10-30 minutes long, with several
> waking hours between.   And when sleep time arrives, there's no mistaking
> it, it's like drinking a large glass of vodka.
>
>
> (((((((((((((((((( ( (  (   (    (O)    )   )  ) ) )))))))))))))))))))
> William J. Beaty                            SCIENCE HOBBYIST website
> billb at amasci com                         http://amasci.com
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> Seattle, WA  206-762-3818    unusual phenomena, tesla coils, weird sci
>
>

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