What Do Scientists Really Know About Polyphasic Sleep?

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  • Опубликовано: 20 июн 2018
  • It is important to get enough sleep, but what happens when you get those eight hours in little naps instead of in one big chunk at night?
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    www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1...
    www.frontiersin.org/articles/...
    onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/f...
    journals.plos.org/plosone/arti...
    www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1...
    link.springer.com/chapter/10....
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    www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/2...
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Комментарии • 741

  • @channingscott009
    @channingscott009 5 лет назад +906

    I have two modes:
    Sleep is for the weak
    Sleeping for a week

  • @siriusblack9999
    @siriusblack9999 6 лет назад +233

    one very important factor to note that is often forgotten is that polyphasic sleep requires sleep episodes to be separated by more than two hours to ensure that your body does not interpret it as interrupted sleep, but rather as fully separated sleep cycles

    • @minotaur470
      @minotaur470 11 месяцев назад +26

      Five years too late but I love how much sleep science sounds like you're pulling off some glitch in a video game

    • @ractheraccoon
      @ractheraccoon 11 месяцев назад +6

      @@minotaur470 lmao it really does tho

    • @XxyGoddam
      @XxyGoddam 11 месяцев назад +8

      ​@@minotaur470sleep overall seems like a very big glitch in the game, where NPC suddenly become aware of the possibilities of the game engine

  • @cup_check_official
    @cup_check_official 6 лет назад +1470

    sleep is for the weak. *yawns and rubs eyes*

  • @IAMDIMITRI
    @IAMDIMITRI 4 года назад +434

    I sleep in winter, the whole season.

  • @nocelebrity6042
    @nocelebrity6042 6 лет назад +338

    I tried reprogramming my brain, but after flashing the BIOS, I bricked it, and that voided the manufacturer warranty.

    • @generalralph6291
      @generalralph6291 4 года назад +2

      Sounds heavenly.

    • @IsmailPbx
      @IsmailPbx 4 года назад +6

      Try hitting it. Usually works.

    • @beholdandfearme
      @beholdandfearme 4 года назад +2

      When they tell you it's a lifetime warranty they only mean 7 years.

  • @Skjoldmc
    @Skjoldmc 6 лет назад +474

    I was sporting an "everyman" polyphasic sleep cycle for a while. Days no longer felt like separate events. It just felt like one continuous everlasting day. (But funny enough I also got this feeling from playing too much Stardew valley.)
    It took a long time to adjust back to my normal view of days as separate events.

    • @polyjohn3425
      @polyjohn3425 6 лет назад +159

      Strictly speaking, days aren't separate events. We divide them based on night and day, sure, but that's kind of arbitrary.

    • @Samzillah
      @Samzillah 6 лет назад +21

      That's what midnights/late afternoons are like. You go to work one day and leave on another.
      Then again I sleep better on those shifts than days because instead of going to bed after work I end up staying up late to be social.

    • @Skjoldmc
      @Skjoldmc 6 лет назад +54

      PolyJohn That's true, but it's much easier to get your head around. It's the difference between "Today I'm gonna do this, this, and this." and "Before my next nap, I'm gonna do this and this. Then take a nap and do this afterwards -- Wait why is it dark outside?"
      It's almost as if remembering all you gotta do in a day becomes as much of a hassle as remembering a week's worth of activities. Brains are weird.

    • @polyjohn3425
      @polyjohn3425 6 лет назад +10

      It's only that way because we expect it to be that way, though. Like, there are lagnuages that don't use tense, and people who think that way seem to do just fine. Chinese languages, for example.

    • @will3346
      @will3346 6 лет назад +2

      So why did you try Everyman and was it helpful?

  • @DankMatter
    @DankMatter 6 лет назад +1046

    I sleep for 24 hours
    *_still tired_*

    • @shadowthetwisted
      @shadowthetwisted 6 лет назад +81

      over sleeping is just as bad as under sleeping.

    • @DankMatter
      @DankMatter 6 лет назад +19

      Yea, but you know what I meant

    • @aarohibhavsar1520
      @aarohibhavsar1520 6 лет назад +25

      Sleeping is sooooo exhausting.

    • @sampantherwhite
      @sampantherwhite 6 лет назад +3

      Sounds like adrenal fatigue. Try acupuncture and herbs!

    • @SyrupSplash
      @SyrupSplash 6 лет назад +12

      Lol, acupuncture

  • @gl3nda96
    @gl3nda96 2 года назад +9

    Quick Reminder: Whether you sleep monophasic or biphasic or whateverphasic, sleep now. Its 1am.

    • @mikado_m
      @mikado_m 2 года назад

      9am actually but i have yet to sleep

  • @ThinkkTwiice
    @ThinkkTwiice 6 лет назад +459

    Can you oversleep? Sometimes I'm able to get 9+ hours of sleep but when I do I often wake up with a headache and feeling really groggy as if I got 3 hours of sleep. Anyone else?

    • @teambeining
      @teambeining 6 лет назад +41

      ThinkkTwiice Yes. You may need only 7 or 8 hours per night. Try setting an alarm to wake up earlier and see how it goes. Another problem may be that you are not getting good quality sleep. Check with your doc to see if you are risk for sleep apnea or if your diet or medications are affecting your sleep cycles.

    • @TimpBizkit
      @TimpBizkit 5 лет назад +6

      My body doesn't let me sleep any more, although sometimes I can get a bit more but it means the time I get sleepier the next night is later until I'm going to bed at sunrise lol. I think the only way to stop this is to get out of bed the same time every day whether it's early in the morning or later, although alternating 2 weeks night shift and 2 weeks day shift makes this impossible unless I quit my job.
      7 hours seems to be my equal tiredness at same time of night number, although sometimes I'll want to lie in bed longer.

    • @99CentRapper
      @99CentRapper 5 лет назад +6

      If I get 7 hours then I feel bad like that

    • @SalmanMKC
      @SalmanMKC 5 лет назад +10

      There are different stages to sleep, if you wake up during REM/deep sleep it can make you feel really tired,waking up during the light sleep stage is best.

    • @AZ-ik1me
      @AZ-ik1me 4 года назад

      🙋🏻‍♀️🙋🏻‍♀️

  • @GeneWaddle
    @GeneWaddle 6 лет назад +578

    So it's better to get all the sleep at once? Yeah, tell that to my bladder.😛

    • @Based-and-Epic-MRSA
      @Based-and-Epic-MRSA 6 лет назад +29

      Gene Waddle me too. I always wake up to pee at least once
      😑

    • @margie713
      @margie713 6 лет назад +10

      Yup. Fortunately I'm able to go back to sleep within seconds after returning to bed.

    • @GeneWaddle
      @GeneWaddle 6 лет назад +136

      I guess it's better to wake up and pee rather than pee and wake up though

    • @Dixitkushagra175
      @Dixitkushagra175 6 лет назад +3

      LOL

    • @turtle2720
      @turtle2720 6 лет назад +18

      Don't dream about going to the toilet ;)

  • @justinkiel3194
    @justinkiel3194 6 лет назад +125

    I was a double major in college studying biology and chemistry while maintaining an Army ROTC contract. I did polyphasic sleep for 2 years sleeping about 3-4 hrs on weekdays and would sleep 6-7 on weekends. on average I would sleep about 27-30 hours a week. I have an overall positive experience of polyphonic sleeping. I found myself very productive at all times, and really only found myself nodding off in really boring classes. I found it really important to keep my mind stimulated in order to stay awake and drank 2-3 cups of coffee a day/night at certain times. My sleep schedule was pretty concrete and did not vary too much throughout each semester. Because I was in class in the morning I could not sleep until late afternoon. Everyday I would get up at 5:30am (as the army made me). I would be in class by 8 and would usually not get out until about 2 or 3pm. My first nap would be after dinner typically and would last for about 2 hours and then I would take a 20min nap at 11:00pm stay up all night and take my final nap (30mins) at 5:00am. I often found it hard to wake from my 2 hour nap and would often sleep through alarms.
    I really like polyphasic sleeping but I had trouble gaining weight, I tried to work out, but never was consistent. On average, I would gain 15-20lbs during the school year and would lose it in the summer. Overall I was very successful, I graduated with a 3.85 GPA in 4 years and took a 172 credit hours and found myself very happy. I feel like someone could be more successful if they worked out more often than just a couple times a week and spread out their sleep through the whole day rather than just the evening. I hope this helps someone!
    P.S. The hardest part of polyphasic sleep is the transition. It took me about 6 months for my body to adapt. If you want to try polyphasic sleep I recommend that you start making gradual changes rather than a dramatic ones. I think that will make for a much easier transition.

    • @hilfyhao1806
      @hilfyhao1806 Год назад

      I think you should spread out your poor little sleep

    • @beholdandfearme
      @beholdandfearme Год назад +6

      Four years later do you still have a positive opinion of polyphasic sleeping?

    • @wiktorkw881
      @wiktorkw881 Год назад

      I'm also curious

    • @celsiusfox2631
      @celsiusfox2631 9 месяцев назад +7

      Dude died of sleep deprivation after writing this comment 😔

    • @________----------.........
      @________----------......... 9 месяцев назад

      @@celsiusfox2631 he said he only did it for 2 years, so i'm guessing he stopped

  • @krystalia_dorawanderer77
    @krystalia_dorawanderer77 3 года назад +109

    I work on 3 shifts for almost 2 years now. I used to force myself to sleep for at least 6 hours straight a day but it made my health went bad. I got sickly. Now, I sleep/ nap when I need to (sleepy of course) and noticed recently that I became productive, more energetic and healthier. I think I sleep 3-4 times a day and I've never been happier than I am now in my adult life.

    • @iresineherb7
      @iresineherb7 2 года назад +13

      may god be with you man I hope you'll be happy forever

    • @ulirichert7691
      @ulirichert7691 2 года назад

      How many hours do you sleep in total per day?

    • @izzyjones7108
      @izzyjones7108 Год назад +2

      Absolutely relatable. I worked shifts for almost half my life. Mostly 3rd shift. Even tho I haven't done that work.in almost 15y, every nite around 930p I perk up and feel energized even when logically I know i should be settling down

  • @pink_lemonade76
    @pink_lemonade76 6 лет назад +18

    I've noticed that when I sleep early like at 9pm or 10pm, I'll wake up every 2 to 3 hours until the morning when I get up around 7:30am(on weekdays). When I sleep later like around 11pm to 1am I sleep the whole night and have pretty vivid memories of my dreams.

  • @slartibartfast426
    @slartibartfast426 6 лет назад +87

    I’d be delighted to see a video on the history of biphasic sleep before electric light

    • @dannytaylor6725
      @dannytaylor6725 2 года назад

      This is a short historical and informative video, to the point
      ruclips.net/video/DKBXFfEPJyg/видео.html

  • @ItsLoriK
    @ItsLoriK 6 лет назад +5

    This may be my favorite RUclips channel. You give us info that we either should know or that is just interesting and you do it in a fun & brief way. Thanks;

  • @4MATT3R
    @4MATT3R 6 лет назад +75

    Watching this instead of sleeping...

    • @Willybean08
      @Willybean08 3 года назад +2

      it's currently 6 PM and i'm tired but that's just because i got 20 hours of sleep in the past 168 hours even though it should be getting like 53

  • @IceMetalPunk
    @IceMetalPunk 6 лет назад +85

    I currently work an inconsistent night schedule, with anywhere from 4 to 11 hours of work, usually ending around midnight. As a result, my sleep schedule is erratic, falling asleep anywhere from midnight to 6AM and waking up anywhere from 10AM to 5PM depending on when I work the next day. Luckily, I only have 4 more days of this job, and my new job starting mid-July will have normal, full-time hours; hopefully my sleeping habits will improve and I'll feel better physically as a result! :D

    • @Bsalais15
      @Bsalais15 5 лет назад

      IceMetalPunk
      I’m working overnight on weekends and normal schedule for school during school. It was easy for the first few weeks but it’s literally making me mad. What symptoms did you have with this inconsistent schedule?

    • @qpSubZeroqp
      @qpSubZeroqp 2 года назад +1

      It's been 3 years now. How do you feel?

    • @IceMetalPunk
      @IceMetalPunk 2 года назад

      @@qpSubZeroqp Better... I mean, I still don't go to sleep until between 12 and 6, but I do wake up the same time every morning 5 days a week, so that's an improvement 😂

    • @gigachad7205
      @gigachad7205 2 года назад

      Sounds like my job. Some days they ask you to come in at 5pm and 2 days later, 5am. I really try to make it work because sleep is very important to me (i go gym), but i don't think I'll last much longer here. Some of my colleagues just don't go to sleep at all if it's a morning shift and i keep telling them it's going to kill you in the long run. They never listen

  • @Master_Therion
    @Master_Therion 6 лет назад +558

    I spent a summer as a sheep herder. It was my job to count the sheep in the morning, as they went to pasture, and again in the evening as they returned. By counting sheep twice a day, I developed a Polyphasic *Sheep* pattern.

    • @margie713
      @margie713 6 лет назад +17

      Ugh

    • @codyofathens3397
      @codyofathens3397 6 лет назад +29

      That... That is just terrible. I... SMH... How many kids do you have? Cause you a dad. Lol.

    • @IceMetalPunk
      @IceMetalPunk 6 лет назад +18

      *Slow clap*

    • @flyhigh9944
      @flyhigh9944 6 лет назад +1

      Master Therion is that a joke ?

    • @codyofathens3397
      @codyofathens3397 6 лет назад +25

      flyhigh No, it was a dad joke. A joke has to be funny-- a dad joke just has to have words followed by a pun. :P

  • @dregoth0
    @dregoth0 6 лет назад +103

    Your brain is like a computer running Windows 95. Defrag and reboot regularly (sleep) or it will crash.

  • @whatevermechanics
    @whatevermechanics 4 года назад +28

    Nikola Tesla basically added 27 years of productive time to his life through using the uberman sleep cycle

    • @KatharineOsborne
      @KatharineOsborne 2 года назад +4

      He also had some mental health issues. Whether they were the result, cause, or just a correlation would be unknown so I’m not sure he can be taken for a good model. Also without further research it would be impossible to prove causation. Tesla was clearly an exceptional person. His creative output was probably more related to his innate abilities (and disabilities; autism and OCD can be essentially superpowers in some contexts).

    • @whatevermechanics
      @whatevermechanics 2 года назад +2

      @@KatharineOsborne I think the biggest part was the autism. I would say he was pretty close to the definition of a savant though so he still had communicative abilities well enough for people to not really notice the autism, but still at a point where people noticed he was off.

  • @Tamugetsu
    @Tamugetsu 5 лет назад +6

    Definitely can back up the memory claim - I have sleep apnea, a condition that in my case means I wake up 37 times an hour without realizing it when I sleep. I lose things, forget appointments, have trouble remembering plans, and forget names and things all the time.
    Oddly, I have great memory for exact quotes and music, and my inability to memorize in math class forced me to learn concepts rather than steps and formulas, which served me really well and ended up with me getting my bachelor’s degree in Mathematics.
    That said, I’ve had a few intelligence tests done as a kid and I scored in the 99th percentile for basically everything except long-term memory.

  • @tosht2515
    @tosht2515 6 лет назад +42

    For me, the key is simply uninterrupted sleep. I get only 5-6 hours a night but I sleep like a rock and feel great in the morning. When I'm thinking about an early morning flight or I have something pressing on my mind, I usually wake up a couple of times and feel a bit foggy during the day. Just me. This was a very interesting episode. 👍

    • @gigachad7205
      @gigachad7205 2 года назад +1

      This is the one. Some nights ill sleep 6 hours uninterrupted and only be a little tired throughout the day. Another night ill get "8" hours but because I'm anxious about the events of the day, i either wake up too early or too many times throughout the night causing more tiredness than the former.

    • @Adonis0604
      @Adonis0604 3 месяца назад

      @@gigachad7205 bro replied 4 yrs late -_-

  • @SomeGuy1117
    @SomeGuy1117 6 лет назад +38

    I can't get enough sleep in one night (due to school) so I sleep twice a day just naturally. This allows me to better budget my time.

    • @enoch327
      @enoch327 6 лет назад +6

      A lot a media personalities do the same thing. On radio in the morning on TV at night. Whatever works. And many systems might work.

  • @Stormaes
    @Stormaes 6 лет назад +5

    I successfully stuck with the uberman schedule for somewhere around 9 months (with one break at the 6 month mark for injuries).
    I did not notice any significant cognitive impairment, and any sleepiness that I encountered was offset by the extra 6 hours. I did notice that my long term memory encoding was not great for that period (not total amnesia, but not as good).
    Its not for everyone, or just anyone. It requires discipline, fantastic sleep habits and engaging hobbies.
    The time around 4am to 6am is the hardest, because all your friends are definitely asleep so it helps to have friends in other countries to talk to.
    You need to have some good hobbies, that you can do as much as you like (I did a lot of art, cooking, was able to read so many more books).
    Something that I noticed about it was that your life needs to be very flexible because the schedule is very inflexible; you need to be ready and able to nap at the exact interval. When you only have 21 minutes to nap, every second is important. I was at college and my teachers were super supportive (especially when they saw my high throughput), but my girlfriend at the time wasn't particularly impressed.

  • @dhairyajoshi_
    @dhairyajoshi_ 6 лет назад +41

    Just when I was about to sleep. Video from sci show, sleep postponed😂

  • @johnharvey5412
    @johnharvey5412 6 лет назад +6

    I tried uberman for a while and it was incredibly difficult to follow. I was tired constantly, couldn't help but oversleep, and had some very vivid dreams.

  • @Nexus2Eden
    @Nexus2Eden 6 лет назад +69

    As someone that is N24 - polyphasic sleep is all I get. My circadian rhythms are useless as I often sleep in direct sunlight and am most wide awake at 2 am. Like today - I slept from 2am to 5am, then again from 3pm to 8pm. Light therapy and melatonin/ambien have zero real effect on managing my sleep disorder - it seems to rotate around the clock wildly since I was a toddler. 😱😒

    • @MadazMazdas
      @MadazMazdas 6 лет назад +3

      samer here but i sleep more like 13-14 hrs

    • @Nexus2Eden
      @Nexus2Eden 6 лет назад +1

      I do sometimes as well - usually I'm up for 36-48 hrs, other times I could, and do, sleep 16-20 hrs a day for a few days. Mostly it's 3 hrs here, 5 hrs. there, usually average about 6-8 a day...but there is never any idea when I'll be exhausted and need to sleep and usually always during the day between 8 am and 2 pm. So, makes like awesome. 🙄😤

    • @FenrirAldebrand
      @FenrirAldebrand 6 лет назад +8

      Someone else with a sleep pattern similar to mine! I'm pretty much nocturnal. Exhausted during light hours, but wide awake at night. [Which makes summer a living nitemare] But I mean, it wasn't much more than a few hundred years ago that we had people who needed to stay awake all night to protect our people from predators. So I just think of myself as their genetic ancestors.

    • @Nexus2Eden
      @Nexus2Eden 6 лет назад +8

      That's one way of looking at it - they also used to call us 'Luna-tics' 🤪. Ever since I was a toddler I'd have to lay in bed staring at the ceiling for hours until dawn and just about an hour before school I'd finally fall deeply asleep. My mother would scream bloody murder all morning long to get me up and ready for school - where I'd sleep for the first half the day until noon.
      Case in point, I fell asleep today around noon and just got up at 10 PM - wide awake and ready for the day. Too bad you can't have a successful career from dusk till dawn - I'd be a Pro! 😏👍😉

    • @FenrirAldebrand
      @FenrirAldebrand 6 лет назад +3

      The Curious Sapien
      In theory you could. Doctors, firefighters, overnight shelf stockers, oilfield/plant/factory workers. But the options *are* limited.
      I tended to have bad sleep patterns as a kid - but thankfully not that bad.

  • @micahphilson
    @micahphilson 6 лет назад +9

    This is great for me just to hear, because for the past 2 weeks or so I've been having terrible sleep deprivation from not being able to fall asleep at night, so I'll most often get from 5 - 6.5 hours per day, and it's been taking its toll.
    Thankfully, now it's the weekend, so I'll be trying hard to hard-reset my sleep. I started by accidentally sleeping until noon today, so...

    • @micahphilson
      @micahphilson 6 лет назад

      Yeah, I accidentally slept through all of my classes. The best way to start the weekend off right!

    • @jhan168
      @jhan168 6 лет назад

      When I'm at school, the maximum hours of sleep I get is 5 hours.
      It's summer break so, thankfully, I can get 7-10 hours of sleep.

  • @generalralph6291
    @generalralph6291 4 года назад +3

    Here’s a theory on sleep. The state of sleep is actually what we live for. Our waking time spent working and playing is merely to collect the accoutrements and experiences we need to enjoy sleep properly. A comfortable bed in a secure house costs money. An interesting conversation provides material for a unique dream. Furthermore, the notion that dreams are nonsense while reality is logical is a false economy. So what, the natural world makes sense? What if the unintelligible properties of dreams make them better than waking consciousness? Finally, the waking consciousness-the person you are-is subservient to the unconscious mind. Your individual identity is not the primary beneficiary of dreams; you are merely a spectator. The unconscious mind that produces dreams is actually a different, and more important, person.

  • @FabiansLab
    @FabiansLab 2 года назад +4

    I sleep from sunset, wake up for about two hours naturally, and then go back to sleep until sunrise. I haven't noticed any effects beyond feeling a bit more energetic than normal during that period. It's usually 4 to 5 hours until I wake up and then another 4 to 5 until sunrise

  • @MrPuschel
    @MrPuschel 6 лет назад +5

    During my college years i had a longer phase where i slept 3x ~3 hours a day. It worked out surprisingly well. However i didn't keep it since it was inconvinient.

  • @selewin
    @selewin 6 лет назад +10

    I did this for a while and loved it. 3 hours at night and 3 20min sleeps throughout the day. Same time every time. Problem was it didn't work with my medication so I had the energy but couldn't take my meds because my meds make me unable to sleep as a side effect.

    • @justinelaricchiuta488
      @justinelaricchiuta488 2 года назад

      What were the meds if you don't mind me asking? I'm only asking bc I am wanting to experiment with these different sleep cycles bc I prefer less sleep but I'm prescribed a stimulant medication. I would like to come off of it. It doesn't seem like I'd be able to experiment and especially wouldn't be able to achieve any goal of changing my sleep pattern with the medications I'm on. Not only that, but my entire goal is to produce more by having more awake to do so, while simultaneously improving my health, fitness, and my entire lifestyle as a whole.

    • @selewin
      @selewin 2 года назад

      @@justinelaricchiuta488 I take methylphenidate like ritalin. I hope I wrote it right. But it works for 4 hours and can't sleep during that time. So it kinda threw of my ritme. And without it i just became so unproductive that the extra time wasn't really worth it.

    • @justinelaricchiuta488
      @justinelaricchiuta488 2 года назад

      @@selewin hmmm I do see what you mean bc I'm prescribed Adderall BUT maybe starting with lower doses could work? I really don't know. I do know that I want off of it. I want to create my life the way I WANT IT TO BE. NOT HOW SOCIETY SAYS MY LIFE SHOULD BE. So I know there are methods already written out. But maybe improvise a little bit? I did an hour an a half last night so I really only need one more 30 min session. My schedule today didn't really allow for me to 4 thirty min naps every 6 hours. So it's really what works for you.

    • @selewin
      @selewin 2 года назад

      @@justinelaricchiuta488 it takes at least 2 weeks to get used to the rithme you train you body to get used to it. i would look it up. like i said in my experience it doesnt work with adhd med. but give it a try if you have the time for it. but if there is anything i would like to tell for adhd dont expect a mirical cure. there sint gonna be that one thing that fixes it. this was one of the things i hoped would help me and it didnt. look for the tools that help you in your situation and be accepting on yourself and your mistakes. they will happen from 6 to 60. its sucks but its oke. you are still a great person if it works or not. hope it does though.

  • @morrius0757
    @morrius0757 6 лет назад +3

    I sleep for 4 hours, wake up for 2 hours and go back to sleep for another 4. I'll NEVER go back to a 8 hour sleep pattern.

  • @paulleysway
    @paulleysway 6 лет назад +3

    This is very interesting, I would normally sleep 2-4 hours a night. Noticing by other co-workers that I have slurred speech throughout the day and I myself would notice that I would have trouble recalling short term events throughout the day. I felt fine and fully energized, but when it took effect, on weekends I would sleep a good 10-12 hours a day to catch up on those hours I missed working.

  • @jordanrael779
    @jordanrael779 6 лет назад +2

    Love this one! ☆☆☆☆☆

  • @tommeng6522
    @tommeng6522 6 лет назад +56

    We dont know much because after some time, scientists get sleepy.

    • @Aras483
      @Aras483 3 года назад +2

      Good one.

  • @kevinwells9751
    @kevinwells9751 6 лет назад +1

    This is of course purely anecdotal, but my roommate in college went onto the Uberman sleep cycle in college (I tried to get on it and was unsuccessful). After a rough transition period of about a week he felt fine and reported feeling productive (though we didn't test him or anything). He maintained it during our January term where we would take one class in three weeks rather than multiple classes over a whole semester, which made the required schedule much easier. That month he watch a bunch of shows he had wanted to see, read a bunch of books, and still reported feeling like he didn't have enough to occupy all of his newfound extra time (since he was awake 22 hours a day instead of 16), particularly the nighttime hours when everyone else was asleep. He transitioned back after about a month of it due to that boredom and the fact that a normal semester was going to be nearly impossible to work around in terms of the frequent short naps that the Uberman is based around.

  • @darkshinob
    @darkshinob 6 лет назад +2

    I did the uberman for about 3 years. The first 1 to 2 months was hell as I was sleepy all the time. But after getting used to it I was just as awake as my monophasic friends. It is demanding socially thou. as some times you have to excuse yourself for a nap because missing one can mess up your day.
    Now I haven't been doing something as draconian for another 3 years, but some cool benefits were left from that uberman period. Like easiness to do lucid dreaming and I can get to sleep in 2 to 5 min, max.

  • @moonkookie1505
    @moonkookie1505 4 года назад +2

    I had this weird period over 2 years when i was 11/12 , during those two summer breaks i used to sleep since 6am to 8am. I don't know how and why, but i managed to live on 2 hours of sleep a day. Never got sick. Never happened to me again after that, but it was fricking weird (i wasn't trying to sleep less, i would just be working on my writing and stuff during the night and waking up around 2 hours later well rested)

  • @gigachad7205
    @gigachad7205 2 года назад +4

    One thing that isn't mentioned is waking up during non-REM sleep. There's a massive difference in tiredness levels when you wake up with a loud alarm during a dream vs light no dream stage.

  • @straykae
    @straykae 6 лет назад +3

    There was this period of time where I only took naps. //shivers. Never again.

  • @phishENchimps
    @phishENchimps 6 лет назад +21

    I wake up 5 hours later regardless of what I do. Dragon energy

  • @scififanman
    @scififanman 6 лет назад +14

    I've heard people can actually train to hypnotize themselves to replace sleep with short-interval hypnosis. That might be an interesting topic for SciShow to discuss, since I haven't personally studied the process myself.

  • @maverick.gaurav
    @maverick.gaurav 6 лет назад +16

    I'm sleepy and am still watching this.

    • @ElectricPyroclast
      @ElectricPyroclast 6 лет назад

      Gaurav Nema I'm still watching this and am still sleepy

  • @abydosianchulac2
    @abydosianchulac2 2 года назад +1

    Having just tried a CPAP machine for the first time with my sleep apnea, I can definitely second the idea of people not always knowing what sleepiness or rather not being sleepy is like. Hoo boy, I suddenly understand how people go to the gym at five in the morning.

  • @Tubeytime
    @Tubeytime 6 лет назад +13

    If humans are supposed to wake during the day and sleep at night, then I guess I'm not human... I knew it!

  • @xmaswitguns
    @xmaswitguns 6 лет назад +2

    For six years I was an on-call Firefighter/EMT. Never getting a consistent night of sleep was very hard.

  • @ArtemisLuna
    @ArtemisLuna 6 лет назад

    Talk about a perfect coincidence... I woke up to go to toilet in the middle of the night, was having trouble getting back to sleep so decided to watch a couple vids on youtube before trying again and this video talking about the drawbacks of interrupted sleep was right at the top of my sub feed!

  • @DataJuggler
    @DataJuggler 4 года назад +1

    If you tell most employers, I am tired I have to take a nap you will not be employed long.
    I have worked on problems for several days of 12+ hours, and given up in exhaustion. Get some sleep and rest over a weekend and I solved the same problem before lunch on Monday. The brain just works better fresh.

  • @MrRofl131
    @MrRofl131 6 лет назад

    Back in 2005/2006 I did follow Steve Pavlina`s blog doing an experiment with Polyphasic Sleep. Good to see it get`s any attention again.

  • @bread6397
    @bread6397 6 лет назад +1

    This actually made me feel sleepy

  • @IIPaused
    @IIPaused 4 года назад

    Information is coming so fast I have to rewatch every moment not twice but thrice

  • @Insectsarecool
    @Insectsarecool 5 лет назад +2

    I think it depends on the person and what you're doing, eating, etc. I'm working on trying to set a polyphasic schedule where I'm sleeping about 4 hours a day.

  • @edi9892
    @edi9892 6 лет назад +10

    Can someone tell me why sleep deprivation occasionally results at some point in me being even more energetic? For a moment my cognitive functions improve again and I feel stronger again and I can't sleep even when I really should. At times, even my stamina increases considerably and I went out for a run in the middle of the night and got further than I ever did during day time. However, before I notice it, I get overly confident and childish and then my sleep deprivation kicks in even harder and no matter how much I sleep the next day I'm ill!
    PS: I only noticed it when I started my PhD. They really have no respect for laws protecting employees...

    • @FutureChaosTV
      @FutureChaosTV 6 лет назад +3

      edi It is the adrenalin and other hormones/chemicals your body puts out in a "crisis" like that.
      If I sleep btw. 2-4 hrs I am also pretty alert and pretty well functioning until about afternoon, when my energy levels and my alertness start dropping of extremely fast.

    • @malteeaser101
      @malteeaser101 6 лет назад

      The circadian rhythm makes you less sleepy, whether you like it or not, and fights against the sleep pressure built up by the chemical adenosine, within the brain, which increases from the moment you wake-up until the next time you sleep.

    • @drrodopszin
      @drrodopszin Год назад +1

      One of the symptoms of depression that sleep deprivation can make you energetic.

    • @edi9892
      @edi9892 Год назад +1

      @@drrodopszin Interesting. At that time, I was close to a burnout.

    • @evaavi4412
      @evaavi4412 2 месяца назад +1

      It's called "overtired" and it's especially obvious in neurodivergent people! Basically the brain goes "Hmm, must be a reason you're not going to sleep despite being tired... Must mean it's an emergency!" and so you end up getting onw more boost that back in prehistory would have helped you outlast whatever persistent danger was after our ancestors.

  • @greentearobin
    @greentearobin 6 лет назад +1

    I used to work as a janitor. At one point, I decided to take on two jobs at once - one as a night janitor, where I worked from 5 pm to 1 or 2 am, and then a second where I worked from 8 am to 12:00 pm. I thought I could just get my sleep in during my twice daily "breaks" between work. I have never been so tired; that was the only time I have experienced exhaustion that was physically painful. I somehow made it through a month of that but then had to quit one of the jobs. Maybe some people can do it but not me.

    • @TimpBizkit
      @TimpBizkit 5 лет назад +1

      I was thinking about a litter picking job from 5am to 9am and a Domino's Pizza delivery job in the evening sometimes until late and siesta-ing between jobs. The main reason for not having those jobs was my mandatory need of Saturdays off. Why? Read the Bible.
      On a 10pm to 6am night shift I tend to sleep either side but on a 6pm to 6am I sleep all in one block as much as possible.

  • @JKRowlingIsMyQueen
    @JKRowlingIsMyQueen 6 лет назад +1

    Polyphasic sleep is a part of my life because mid-day naps are my thing.
    They used to be because of depression but now it’s just because I don’t get work from 2-5. So I can get a nap in if I woke up early enough

  • @ablan8801
    @ablan8801 2 года назад

    Very cool

  • @General12th
    @General12th 6 лет назад

    Good timing. I just switched my sleep schedule from normal to nocturnal and I have no idea why!

  • @chillsahoy2640
    @chillsahoy2640 6 лет назад +1

    In the end how much and what kind of sleep you can afford to get depends on the type of job you have, and how far you live from work. Some people are on permanent night shifts, other people are on rota with variable hours, other people have stable 9 to 5 weekdays, but have to travel 2 hours each way because they live in very rural areas with no local job opportunities.
    The principle of 8/8/8 is very nice in theory. But in practice, it's more like 8 hours of work and then your combined 16 hours of sleep + 'your own' time must include sleep, socializing, hygiene, exercise, household chores, commute, eating, shopping and some kind of hobby or pastime.

  • @benw9949
    @benw9949 6 лет назад

    My sleep/wake day/night cycle can go all over the place. I have always been more of a night owl than a morning person. But around the end of high school and start of college, and ever since, I've had some level of insomnia and trouble getting enough sleep, and weirdly disconnected sleep rhythms. Then taking care of my grandmother completely wrecked any pattern I had. For about 9 months after she died, I tried to force myself into a regular sleep schedule and daily routine. It didn't work. It stabilized only a little, then would go out of whack wildly for days or weeks. At the end of it, I gave that up and let it settle into whatever pattern it would, thinking it would find some equilibrium on its own. Nope. It still will wander over time and reach some point were I have to reset, sleep for a long time, oversleep, then it begins some new timing. The most successful I've found is to be active after dark, any time of night, and sleep some around (before or after) dawn, typically in the morning before noon. This is not how the rest of the world works, but it works best for me. But even then, I can't stay on a regular cycle. I don't know what is messed up with my body chemistry that does this, and I do not want to have to take drugs to manage it, but if something on a low-level, every-so-often dosage helped, I could do that. (I am likely to try a melatonin supplement a friend recommended, but in small doses.) I would love to have good, reliable sleep habits like the rest of the planet. But I haven't ever since college age. I don't think it's going to change by now. It really interferes with my life and enjoyment.

  • @overseer5060
    @overseer5060 4 года назад

    I was thinking about changing my sleeping cycle, but when you said 'at my own risk' I started thinking about it.

  • @pelonete5000
    @pelonete5000 3 года назад +1

    Because of my circumstances I had to start sleeping 4 hours at night and two more naps one 2 hours and the third one 1 hour and I feel just great!! The deepness of the extra two naps are deeeeeeeep.I'm 60 years old

  • @Puffycheeks
    @Puffycheeks 6 лет назад +21

    I work 12 hour night shifts and it is truly horrid.

    • @EHZ181
      @EHZ181 6 лет назад +1

      yeah im in the same boat, though only on the weekends, still it feels like i work more

    • @OfficialWEIRD
      @OfficialWEIRD 6 лет назад

      🤝

    • @easylife6348
      @easylife6348 5 лет назад

      Puffycheeks I work 11. I'm fine with that.

  • @GregRodgers1
    @GregRodgers1 6 лет назад

    I used to do a shift job of 12 hours from 6pm to 6am, and the company had a rule that you can not do more than ten days in aro, so there was a lot of people doing ten days then dropping the next day and then back for another ten.

  • @TaliyahP
    @TaliyahP 6 месяцев назад +1

    My take away from this is that biphasic is the only form of polyphasic that isn't outright unhealthy and that siesta schedules might actually be decent

  • @beautye5909
    @beautye5909 3 года назад +5

    I read and write alot (for work and hobby) and i switched to a triphasic pattern to help with focus. I sleep 4 at night and take 2 2-hour naps during the day. Not only do I focus better, i schedule times awake for certain activities and get alot more done during the day. Ive also been eating healthier; either because its being planned better or I have just have more energy to make something healthier.

  • @JT-wf7ou
    @JT-wf7ou 6 лет назад +1

    I worked full time overnights (40 hour work week) while going to college full time (Between 16 and 18 credits) for three semesters and I am here to say that SLEEP IS IMPORTANT!!!!!
    I dropped well over 25lbs, was malnourished, irritable, drinking at least two 12oz redbulls and six 8oz cups of coffee a day, and had trouble maintaining any semblance of a normal life.
    I graduated though, but I wouldn't recommend it

  • @klutterkicker
    @klutterkicker 6 лет назад +4

    For more than a decade it's been absolutely impossible for me to sleep without waking up in the middle, about once every 3 hours or less.

    • @abeer6383
      @abeer6383 Год назад

      Why? For drinking water or going to toilet? There is solution for that.

    • @klutterkicker
      @klutterkicker Год назад

      @@abeer6383 I usually do both for my own peace of mind but I think the reason is that I so frequently get small amounts of sleep on the weekdays and try to make up for it on the weekends. I'm working to improve that though.

  • @hyrulphicsound
    @hyrulphicsound 6 лет назад +1

    I showed this video to my 3-month-old but she still insists 3am is a good time to start the day.

  • @nikonissinen6772
    @nikonissinen6772 6 лет назад +2

    I used to do polyphasic sleep three months in a row. Working from home made that possible. 4 hours of sleep, 4 hours of wake time, repeat. Always at the same time. Worked fine and I managed to do more work than ever before in my life durin those months.

    • @doca989
      @doca989 Год назад

      How, when you sleep 12 hours a day?

    • @nikonissinen6772
      @nikonissinen6772 Год назад

      @@doca989 because I was always well rested and working only 4 hours. I felt good all the time and that produced better work results faster. also when I went to bed I instantly fell asleep and powerslept the 4 hours.

  • @sarahbeara946
    @sarahbeara946 6 лет назад +1

    I would interested in research about sleep and pregnancy. I haven’t been able to find much on my own. I know sleep is extremely important for both mom and the growing baby. My OB said it’s okay to take 2-3 naps per day as long as the naps are between 30-45 mins and you get a consistent 7-9 hours of sleep at night. But I am now in my third trimester and usually have to wake up twice to pee and a few other times to change positions because my everything hurts. I’ve read everything I can about how to get better sleep but I was more curious about all the research there is on pregnancy and sleep

  • @Creaform003
    @Creaform003 6 лет назад +1

    I work shifts in a service station, 28 hour sleep cycle resulting in a 6 day week instead of 7.
    It works reasonably well and I get 9 hours of sleep per day and I don't get sleepy at night.
    The only problem is nobody has developed a 28 hour watch, clock or app so my phone is filled with alarms for when to eat, sleep and wake up. That and estimating how long ago something happened can be weirdly off, a month is 4 days shorter and frequently ill see people twice in my day but it's been 2 separate days for them.

  • @JamesSpeiser
    @JamesSpeiser 6 лет назад

    awesome

  • @jaydenisaacs4855
    @jaydenisaacs4855 6 лет назад +24

    Yeah but have you hear about DPSD. Oh man I stay up until 4 in the morning before I finally feel tired.

    • @robbyhenton8038
      @robbyhenton8038 6 лет назад

      Helicoprion it's 4am for me now lol

    • @jessicaharris1608
      @jessicaharris1608 6 лет назад +4

      I was hoping for some mention of DSPS/DSPD and non-24 myself. Someone needs to work on the computer systems when most people aren't using them. Someone needs to cover overnights in the hospital and healthcare in general. DSPS/DSPD folks are designed for those fields. We biologically PREFER 2nd and 3rd shift so let's take advantage of the common shift differential pay increase for working the hours most people don't or can't do! :-)

    • @chaosdweller
      @chaosdweller 3 года назад

      Holy cow i think i have that, ....thx for the info on it.

  • @ezterion
    @ezterion 6 лет назад

    This is like a collection of all the sleep problems i've had during the last 8-12 years.. xD

  • @horrorkesh
    @horrorkesh 6 лет назад

    thats my issue not only is it really hard for me to get to sleep earlier than 2am but if i have to be up early i wake up every 2-3 hours usually

  • @Djappyd
    @Djappyd 6 лет назад +1

    Made me imagine having two shifts of work a day, oh god!

  • @tanveershaikh7070
    @tanveershaikh7070 3 года назад +1

    More than 90% of successful/great people in world slept less than 6 hour a day....
    It may feel stressful or depressive at start.. but its gonna be great when you used to it

  • @jeffbrownstain
    @jeffbrownstain 6 лет назад +1

    For the past two months or so, I've been sleep an absolute max of six hours, averaging more around 3-4, and I sleep during the early morning, around 9am.
    I have the most insane and ridiculous sleep schedule of anyone I've ever known.
    I'm constantly up through the ass crack hours of the night.
    I don't know how I've been able to wake comfortably on 3 hours of sleep. I like to think it's because of meditation and a somewhat-not-unhealthy diet, but who knows.

  • @pokemongo-py6yq
    @pokemongo-py6yq 6 лет назад

    Watching this past midnight.

  • @bfbvouabeorbvoaervure963
    @bfbvouabeorbvoaervure963 5 лет назад +3

    I just take a twenty minute nap when I’m tired...

  • @avsaucyboi9733
    @avsaucyboi9733 6 лет назад +16

    I have an internal clock that most of the time wakes me up at the same time. More recently I have been waking up at 5:30 and continue to do so no matter what time I go to bed.
    But I still feel miserable waking up

    • @samuelbaird4983
      @samuelbaird4983 6 лет назад

      A Vsaucy Boi Just don't sleep for a whole day and see what happens

    • @michaelji6525
      @michaelji6525 6 лет назад

      I however, don't feel miserable.

    • @TheMightyBattleSquid
      @TheMightyBattleSquid 6 лет назад

      Samuel Baird as someone with the same sort of issue I tried that sort of "reset" and it just made it harder to fall asleep in coming weeks because I had had basically practiced ignoring my body's sleep signals for the whole 24 hours before I could sleep again.

    • @daniel2300
      @daniel2300 4 года назад

      A Vsaucy Boi the miserable feel when waking up is probably due to lack of sugar in your blood. 2 spoons of linseed oil + cinnamon and almond butter before sleep should help.

  • @BlueSlime_YouTube
    @BlueSlime_YouTube 6 лет назад +13

    Definitely thought it said "Polyphasic SHEEP"

  • @vianized5248
    @vianized5248 2 года назад

    This is the type of video that I watch when I have insomnia

  • @thegreatestalive
    @thegreatestalive 6 лет назад +1

    the us navy declared a war on sleep 4 hours is all they think people need :)

  • @sebbes333
    @sebbes333 6 лет назад +6

    so... if I make it so I generate as few worthwhile memories as possible in the day, then I can sleep for 2-ish hour's at night, because there is so little that needs to be stored? ;P

  • @spuriusscapula6481
    @spuriusscapula6481 Месяц назад

    Not a scientist, but i personally believe that some people are naturally polyphasic while others are monophasic, the same way some people are night howls and so on
    I took a week off work and decided to sleep when i felt like it without trying to stick to a schedule, and what i found is that without a schedule, i naturally ended up sleeping in one block of 4-5 hours, being awake and alert for about 3 hours after and then being sleepy again and sleeping another 2 to 4 hours, and the rest of the day feeling way more rested than i ever felt trying to force myself into sleeping in one block from 10 to 6

  • @curlybit
    @curlybit Год назад

    When I was in college I slept from 3 - 7. That is 3am - 7am and 3pm - 7pm. For every 8 hours awake I got 4 hours of sleep. I went to class during the day. Slept 4 hours. Woke up, studied, than hung out with friends at night. 3am I slept until 7am. I always felt refreshed and had time for everything I wanted to do. To this day at 3pm I get sleepy and wish I could nap. For me 3 - 7 was the ideal sleep times.

  • @Donglator
    @Donglator 6 лет назад +3

    go to sleep at 8, wake up at 12, stay up till 1, fall asleep again.

  • @radagastwiz
    @radagastwiz 6 лет назад +1

    And remember - as Michael certainly knows - that responsible people take steps to prepare for a nap...

  • @neo-xy3fr
    @neo-xy3fr 2 года назад +1

    I once slept for 12hrs straight. Best sleep I ever had.
    But I generally feel more productive when I sleep less.
    Also, Often times when I decide to stay awake I don't feel sleepy even after 24hrs later and I would need to force myself to sleep because not sleeping would probably kill me

  • @namemcnameface
    @namemcnameface 6 лет назад

    Please do an episode on narcolepsy and cataplexy.

  • @Ankushdas2001
    @Ankushdas2001 4 года назад +1

    i am here just becoz of batman...
    he also follows polyphasic sleep cycle allowing him to sleep 3-4 hours a day....

  • @TobyGarcia
    @TobyGarcia 6 лет назад +1

    I swear the title said "Polyphasic Sheep" before I clicked through

  • @rei_cirith
    @rei_cirith 6 лет назад +3

    I kept accidentally reading, "Polyphasic Sheep"

  • @child_of_God316
    @child_of_God316 4 года назад +1

    I don't understand why people give such bad information sometimes. Yeah a lot of what he said was true but you do not need any more than 6 hours of sleep as a full-grown adult unless you are much older. elderly people need more sleep just like young kids. there's a lot of people even scientists and doctors out there that argue that you don't even need that much. REM sleep is not this big long process that they make it out to be your usually only in REM sleep for like a half an hour to an hour at a time. If you got 3 hours of sleep and then you were awake for 9 hoursand then you got three more hours of sleep and we're awake for 9 hours and you follow that routine you would be just fine but it would take like a week or two to get used to and during that period of time you would notice a lot of crappy changes. But most people would be fine once they got through the adjustment. The thing to keep in mind though is that everybody's body and mine is different so some things that work for certain people don't always work for others

  • @ScottLahteine
    @ScottLahteine 6 лет назад

    I found when living in a hot environment that a siesta during the hottest part of the day and spending more time awake at night was needed to make it more bearable.

  • @therealnoriega1433
    @therealnoriega1433 3 года назад

    Up tryna sleep watching sleep videos about sleeping

  • @cptncatholi
    @cptncatholi 6 лет назад +1

    Am I the only one who got the email notification and read it as "Polyphasic Sheep?" I mean, the sheep in thumbnail kinda influenced my perception, but it probably is a sign that I need to get more monophasic sleep.

  • @YuriRadavchuk
    @YuriRadavchuk 6 лет назад

    It's a contraversial statement that ppl can have uninterrupted sleep sesh, becausr it's consisted of phases deeper and more superficial and more deep phases. The logic is to have uninterrupted 90min phases. It's much harder to hit the 90 minutes, and quite easy to miss. The hardest thing is to wake up from the deepest part of sleep.