Is
'8 Uninterrupted Hours a Night' Flawed Conventional Wisdom?
by
Mark Sisson
Mark’s Daily Apple
Recently
by Mark Sisson: The
Importance of Play, Long Walks and Outdoor Workouts, or Why the
Optional Stuff Isn’t Actually Optional
Conventional
Wisdom
always gets an eyebrow raise from me. I can't help it. Eventually,
I take an honest look at whatever the experts are saying, but skepticism
gets first dibs. I'd call it an instinct if it weren't learned behavior
from years of being burned. For example, I once took to task the
most pervasive "truth" around: that everyone needs to drink
eight glasses of water a day or risk kidney failure, toxin buildup,
bladder cancer, and debilitating constipation. It was pretty easy
to do.
But it's not
all BS. Smoking is bad for you, for example. See? I can admit when
they're right!
I wonder about
the CW position on sleep, though. We generally agree on the recommended
duration
of sleep. "About eight solid hours" is what you'll see everywhere,
from official governmental health guides to paleo nutrition blogs
(I'm sure there's some niche community out there claiming to have
"transcended" sleep, though). I'm not going to argue with around
eight hours, but note the use of "solid." What does it connote?
Unbroken. Monophasic.
Constant. Actually, it both connotes and denotes these things. Solid
sleep is good sleep, right? And solid sleep means sleeping for about
eight hours without waking. If you wake up, you've got a
problem. Right?
Maybe
not.
For most of
human history, nighttime meant darkness. Not the blueish whitish
permaglow from storefronts, billboards, and headlights enjoyed by
modern city-goers. Not the yellow-orange bath radiating down from
street lamps on quiet suburban streets, so ubiquitous that you only
notice them when they go out. I'm talking about real, permeating
darkness. Camping darkness. Small country road with the car lights
out darkness. For our ancestors as recently as a couple hundred
years ago, this kind of nighttime darkness lasted up to fourteen
hours (well, it does today, too, but we mask it with all that lighting
and housing). Artificial lighting meant candles and firewood, and
those cost (money or time) and don't really replace daylight (anyone
who's stifled yawns around a campfire knows that) like today's artificial
lighting replaces daylight. People got to bed earlier – because,
unless you're rich enough to burn candles all night, what else are
you going to do when it's dark everywhere but, as Thomas Middleton
said,
"sleepe, feed, and fart?" – and their sleep was biphasic,
or broken up into two four hour segments, with the first
beginning about two hours after nightfall.
The
first segment of biphasic sleep was called "first sleep" or "deep
sleep," while the second was called "second sleep" or "morning sleep."
Numerous records of these terms persist throughout preindustrial
European archival writings, while the concept of two sleeps is common
in traditional cultures across the globe. Separating "first sleep"
from "second sleep" was an "hour or more" of gentle activity and
wakefulness. People generally didn't spend this time online gaming
or surfing the web or trolling the fridge for snacks; instead, they
used it to pray, meditate, chat, or to simply just lie there and
ruminate on life, the universe, and everything. It was still dark
out so they tended to keep it pretty mellow. Sounds nice, huh?
Robert Louis
Stevenson liked the idea, too. Sleep historian (awesome-sounding
job!) Roger Ekirch writes
of Stevenson who, in the fall of 1878, while trekking through the
French highlands on foot, alone, made a remarkable discovery. As
anyone who backpacks or spends time outdoors will corroborate, Stevenson
found himself drifting off to sleep shortly after sunset.
He awoke around midnight, smoked a cigarette, and, only after "enjoying
an hour's contemplation," fell back asleep. That hour, that "one
stirring hour" moved him; Stevenson had never before experienced
a "more perfect hour." He had awoken not because of an
interloper, a night terror, or any other external actor, but because
of what he later described as a "wakeful influence [that] goes abroad
over the sleeping hemisphere" and is unknown to "those who dwell
in houses."
Read
the rest of the article
February 24, 2011
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© 2011 Mark's Daily Apple
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