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shortfatbalduglyman
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11 May 2024, 11:54 am

How often do you have difficulty falling or staying asleep?

How often do you sleep at work or school?

Besides home, where have you slept?

How often do you sleep somewhere noisy?

Can you sleep standing up or in a chair?

At work, sometimes coworkers sleep in chairs on lunch, break, or on the clock. Break room often loud and crowded. Home Depot hires convicted felons and customers often have the nerve to waltz into the break room. There is no way I could sleep when it is so loud. How do they do it?

How often do you have a sleepless night?

How often do you pull an all nighter and what were you trying to accomplish?

How well do you function sleep deprived?



IsabellaLinton
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11 May 2024, 2:47 pm

How often do you have difficulty falling or staying asleep?

Always, my whole life. I've needed prescription sleep meds every night for decades. I had a sleep study that showed my brain doesn't do the normal sleep / wake patterns on its own, so I need meds just like a diabetic might need insulin. I have apnea too, so I think that wakes me up.

Pre-meds it generally took me about three hours to fall asleep, and I'd wake up at the dawn no matter how much I tried to get back to sleep. I got about three hours of sleep per night, and none of it was Delta (deep restorative sleep).

Oh, another thing that helped is that I take ADHD meds now. They wake me up more in the daytime, so when they wear off I'm actually able to feel tired enough to sleep (with my prescription sedative.)



How often do you sleep at work or school?

Never - I don't work anymore but I had such bad insomnia I just walked around like a zombie all the time.
I was so tired I could have cried.



Besides home, where have you slept?

Besides a bed at bedtime? No where.
I can't even nap on my bed. It has to be bedtime or my brain won't shut up.



How often do you sleep somewhere noisy?

I sleep only in a bed, with 33db foam earplugs.
I can't sleep without earplugs.
If my partner snores or puts the TV on I have to sleep in the other room.



Can you sleep standing up or in a chair?

Nope.


How do they do it?

I have no idea.



How often do you have a sleepless night?

I'm lucky to get about 5-6 hours with my meds and earplugs.
I seldom have truly sleepless nights anymore because of the meds.



How often do you pull an all nighter and what were you trying to accomplish?

I stay up all night most nights because I like night.
I try to sleep in the day.
I've had a few all-dayers just from anxiety related to trauma, parenting, finances, etc.



How well do you function sleep deprived?
My whole life is sleep deprived and my Global Functioning scores are very low.


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Edna3362
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11 May 2024, 4:07 pm

My answers may vary due to recent changes.

Quote:
How often do you have difficulty falling or staying asleep?

For most of my life, it was inconsistent. The factors can range between mismatch of biological clock, gut discomfort, disruptive breathing, psych issues to sensory issues.

Now it's just constant music in my head and yet to understand how I fall asleep again.

Quote:
How often do you sleep at work or school?

So far? Very often.
I've been sleeping in classes since 3rd grade, and all the way throughout high school and college.

Even at work; but that's less intentional.
I fall asleep not only due to sleep quality issues, but also due to hormonal shifts and it's annoying.

Quote:
Besides home, where have you slept?

Other than work and school -- maybe around my grandparents' house, which is only across the street from my current house.

Quote:
How often do you sleep somewhere noisy?

Often enough. Either my house had to deal with live bands and nightly karaokes. If not at home, I've dealt with crowded and festive places and would fall asleep there if I'm really tired.

Quote:
Can you sleep standing up or in a chair?

Sure I could.
In fact, I would like to. To lessen hyperacidity and sinus issues.

Quote:
At work, sometimes coworkers sleep in chairs on lunch, break, or on the clock. Break room often loud and crowded. Home Depot hires convicted felons and customers often have the nerve to waltz into the break room. There is no way I could sleep when it is so loud. How do they do it?

My theory? Enough desire to sleep like deprivation and enough sense of safety/lack of degree of fear.

One needs at least both to fall asleep in places that are both loud and being walked on, at risk of getting your stuff stolen.

So if I were to sleep at loud places and at risk of getting walked on; I better not bring my phone, wallet, keys that will keep me up just to fall asleep in any public spaces...
Or be with someone I can really trust to watch my back and not let anything happen to me -- of course, this also means this person is also someone who doesn't judge and is willing to put up with me sleeping in public.

Quote:
How often do you have a sleepless night?

For most of my life, very often.
One, was a major mismatch of my biological clock. Two, bedtime was a troublesome affair to me. Three, waking up was painful and I'd rather skip that.

These past months, It changed.
Quote:
How often do you pull an all nighter and what were you trying to accomplish?

Very often.
But not for work or school or any projects; but for binging media.
I had some form of addiction which is less true now.

Quote:
How well do you function sleep deprived?

Before the age 24 or so, I can shrug the whole thing off, skip an entire day or so then go to school or work full time, no issue.

Then somewhat I couldn't. Why?
I had layers of problems before hand that happened to be chronically more painful than sleep deprivation -- and did not know it was fixable until years of dealing with such.
Whenever a layer was fixed, sleep deprivation and it's subtle effects became more notable.


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utterly absurd
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11 May 2024, 5:57 pm

Quote:
How often do you have difficulty falling or staying asleep?

Always. My schedule has to allow 10 hours for sleeping because then on good nights I'll sleep 8 hours.
During the day, however, I'm very good at sleeping. Even if I slept well the night before, I can fall asleep all day.

Quote:
How often do you sleep at work or school?

I can't usually do this very easily because there's too much going on around me, but I have occasionally fallen asleep at school when things are more quiet.

Quote:
Besides home, where have you slept?

I can't easily sleep outside of a bed (or couch) unless my tiredness reaches such an extreme degree I could sleep anywhere, which is very rare. The only exception is sometimes I can sleep in the car (not when I'm driving of course), but that's harder than it used to be.
Even if I'm in a bed that's not my own bed, I usually have trouble sleeping. But that's mostly because my bed is custom-made to accommodate my 10-meter-long body so if I'm in a normal-size bed my legs just flop right off the end.

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How often do you sleep somewhere noisy?

Never. This is impossible for me.

Quote:
Can you sleep standing up or in a chair?

No, except sometimes in a car.

Quote:
At work, sometimes coworkers sleep in chairs on lunch, break, or on the clock. Break room often loud and crowded. Home Depot hires convicted felons and customers often have the nerve to waltz into the break room. There is no way I could sleep when it is so loud. How do they do it?

I have no idea. If I was exhausted I would have difficulty doing anything, but I don't think I could actually fall asleep in a situation like that.

Quote:
How often do you have a sleepless night?

It's less common than it used to be. I eventually figured out that almost every sleepless night I had was the result of me forgetting to take my ADHD meds, which made it impossible for me to calm down and sleep. Since then I've gotten better about remembering my meds so it's a lot rarer now. But it's still common to spend a large part of the night awake.

Quote:
How often do you pull an all nighter and what were you trying to accomplish?

I don't think I've ever deliberately stayed up all night. I could probably accomplish more if I was nocturnal, but unfortunately my schedule can't work with that. Although sometimes I have eventually given up on sleeping because waking up after three hours of sleep is worse than getting up after no sleep at all.

Quote:
How well do you function sleep deprived?

I used to be able to go through a whole day without even noticing I was sleep deprived. Now I can still do that if I'm doing things and active, but if I have to sit in front of a computer all day while sleep deprived, I will not get anything done.


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shortfatbalduglyman
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13 May 2024, 6:25 pm

shortfatbalduglyman wrote:
How often do you have difficulty falling or staying asleep?

a couple times a week. sometimes it takes a couple hours to fall asleep or i wake up and can't fall back asleep for a couple of hours.

How often do you sleep at work or school?

fell asleep in the breakroom @ work 2x in three and a half years. some coworkers sleep in the breakroom every shift or so.

Besides home, where have you slept?

school

How often do you sleep somewhere noisy?

light sleeper, sound sensitivity

Can you sleep standing up or in a chair?

in a car, yes. otherwise, no.

At work, sometimes coworkers sleep in chairs on lunch, break, or on the clock. Break room often loud and crowded. Home Depot hires convicted felons and customers often have the nerve to waltz into the break room. There is no way I could sleep when it is so loud. How do they do it?

i don't know. maybe it's natural and easy for them, and something i could never accomplish no matter what i do.

How often do you have a sleepless night?

once every couple of months

How often do you pull an all nighter and what were you trying to accomplish?

never pulled an all nighter before, not even in undergrad. nothing accomplished.

How well do you function sleep deprived?


even worse than with sleep, delayed reaction time, surreal, dissociated



Harmonie
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13 May 2024, 8:13 pm

How often do you have difficulty falling or staying asleep?
Frequently. Sometimes I will struggle to fall asleep for a while. Sometimes I will wake up early and not be able to fall back asleep. It's frustrating for sure. =(

How often do you sleep at work or school?
Lol. I don't do that. Can't say it's always been that way, though. Back when I worked nights and tried to do college during the day, I literally could not keep myself awake sometimes. It was so embarrassing. I remember even nodding out in orchestra with my instrument in hand! :o

Besides home, where have you slept?
Aside from hotels and stuff like that... Buses, break rooms, etc.

How often do you sleep somewhere noisy?
I sleep with fans. I can't fall asleep with noises that I don't control, though.

Can you sleep standing up or in a chair?
Only when I'm extremely tired/switching up my sleep schedules too much, like the aforementioned scenario I mentioned in the second question.

At work, sometimes coworkers sleep in chairs on lunch, break, or on the clock. Break room often loud and crowded. Home Depot hires convicted felons and customers often have the nerve to waltz into the break room. There is no way I could sleep when it is so loud. How do they do it?
Sleep deprivation. I nodded off in the break room at my workplace when I was doing both university and work. It wasn't something I'd ever do intentionally.

How often do you have a sleepless night?
Almost never. I have nights where I lose lots of sleep, though.

How often do you pull an all nighter and what were you trying to accomplish?
Almost never. The last time I recall intentionally doing that was, again, during the time where I tried to work, commute, and do college at the same time. Finals week, I pulled at least one all-nighter (on a night I didn't work) to get stuff done.

How well do you function sleep deprived?
Unless I'm to the point where I'm nodding out, I can function okay... As okay as I ever function I guess. :chin:


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Michel Ardan
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14 May 2024, 4:11 pm

shortfatbalduglyman wrote:
How often do you have difficulty falling or staying asleep?


Every night, except when exhausted, since early in life.

shortfatbalduglyman wrote:
How often do you sleep at work or school?


Absolutely never. In fact, I didn’t even sleep during mandatory nap-time in kindergarten, which made teachers unhappy. Also stopped having naps at home very early. Two fun facts about this: one afternoon, they were chatting in the room and one of them was wrong on some fact so I spoke up to correct her (at age 5) and they were shocked; the same school year, I noticed that you could sleep as long as you want, even during the next lecture (they would let you on the mattress) so once I tricked them to think I was sleeping until recess.

shortfatbalduglyman wrote:
Besides home, where have you slept?


Family, friends, and hotels. I never sleep in car and trains unless I am extremely exhausted and it would be involuntary anyway.

shortfatbalduglyman wrote:
How often do you sleep somewhere noisy?


Not often but my apartment is more noisy than it should due to running heating water. It’s not loud, in fact people talk louder, but it’s constantly there.

shortfatbalduglyman wrote:
Can you sleep standing up or in a chair?


Only in a car after a sleepless night (see above)

shortfatbalduglyman wrote:
At work, sometimes coworkers sleep in chairs on lunch, break, or on the clock. Break room often loud and crowded. Home Depot hires convicted felons and customers often have the nerve to waltz into the break room. There is no way I could sleep when it is so loud. How do they do it?


Sleeping in a loud environment is feasible if you’re really tired. I can’t get my head around sleeping in such an uncomfortable position.

shortfatbalduglyman wrote:
How often do you have a sleepless night?


It’s extremely rare. I don’t even remember the last time if it exists at all. I usually sleep for a few hours at worst.

shortfatbalduglyman wrote:
How often do you pull an all nighter and what were you trying to accomplish?


I don’t think it happened more than once. It was in December 2003 during a school travel in 7th grade. We were going from France to Germany for a week or so and the kid next to me and I decided to avoid sleeping. Unsuccessfully thankfully.

shortfatbalduglyman wrote:
How well do you function sleep deprived?


Not very well. I’ve been sleep deprived for years but that means like 6 hours of sleep per night. When it’s less than 4, it’s really hard. I once had a business trip for which I had to wake up at 4 am to meet a colleague who would be driving us there and I got to bed at the normal time, which means way too late even on a regular day, I mean midnight or something. The meeting was hard to follow, Thankfully my input wasn’t really needed.



ToughDiamond
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14 May 2024, 7:38 pm

How often do you have difficulty falling or staying asleep?
Occasionally.
Sometimes I can't fall asleep in the first place for ages. Usually it's because my mind won't be quiet, but it can be hunger, lack of exercise, or inability to get physically comfortable. Also I tend to flog my intellect while I'm awake, and don't usually give it a rest during the hours before bed.

Sometimes I wake up after an hour or two and can't get back to sleep. Don't know what does that.

Sometimes I have "terminal insomnia" where I wake rather too early in the morning and can't go back to sleep. That seems more of a physical thing, can't get comfortable. So I get up early. It's been mistaken for an admirable virtue.

How often do you sleep at work or school?
Never. There was nowhere comfy to sleep, for one thing. Nor would I have felt safe.

Besides home, where have you slept?
Hotels, friends' houses, in tents, on a train from Paris to Rome. Never on a plane. Never at an airport - they make sure of that by playing noisy ads every 10 minutes throughout the night, and I don't want my baggage to be stolen while I'm asleep.

How often do you sleep somewhere noisy?
I can sleep with fans and with mp3s of rain and thunder effects and pink noise - anything continuous, and it helps if it's my own choice. Intermittent sounds, no way.

Can you sleep standing up or in a chair?
I've only once slept without lying down, and that was after being unslept for about 48 hours because of a long journey. I was in a chair at the time.

At work, sometimes coworkers sleep in chairs on lunch, break, or on the clock. Break room often loud and crowded. Home Depot hires convicted felons and customers often have the nerve to waltz into the break room. There is no way I could sleep when it is so loud. How do they do it?
I suppose they're exhausted.

How often do you have a sleepless night?
Almost never. I nearly always get at least a few hours' sleep, and usually more.

How often do you pull an all nighter and what were you trying to accomplish?
Very rarely. I take a long-haul flight between the UK and USA twice a year, and can't sleep. It's a pain in the butt because they encourage sleeping by dimming the lights and letting passengers tilt their seats back, and I don't like having to wake the passenger next to me so I can get past them to go and urinate.

How well do you function sleep deprived?
I function remarkably well but I feel ill - groggy and slightly sick. When British Airways screwed up my flight connection and caused me to be awake for much longer than usual, after I'd arrived home I was hallucinating. I kept thinking I could see people out of the corners of my eyes.

But it didn't debilitate me much. I described clearly to my family what was happening and hypothesised intelligently about why it was happening. My environment had been unusual for a couple of days, in that there were people all around me, which there normally hadn't been before because I'd been living alone for months with very little company. So I'd had to be alert to the approach of strangers in case they banged into me or wanted to say something to me, etc. Afterwards it took some time for the hypervigilance to wear off, and my brain was trying to go into sleep mode, which is when you get dreams, which are hallucinations. It wasn't scary or anything, just repeated momentary impressions in my peripheral vision that there was a figure sitting on a shelf or in some other strange place.



shortfatbalduglyman
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18 Oct 2024, 5:41 pm

since april last year (age 40), on days off work, usually sleep 9pm to 4am, wake up, eat, and then two hours after waking up, one hour nap.

on work days, on the way to work, that's the time i'm the most tired in the day. however, i do not sleep, b/c i am afraid that precious lil "people" will have the nerve to bother me (that otherwise would not have bothered me if i were to have been half awake).

seriously sleep deprived. i do not understand how anyone could work two full time i jobs, or anything like that, and plenty of people do.



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18 Oct 2024, 6:47 pm

Sleep is nice. Means we get to be unconscious for a while. Like a non-existence simulator.


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Carbonhalo
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18 Oct 2024, 7:16 pm

shortfatbalduglyman wrote:
How often do you have difficulty falling or staying asleep?

Now...once a week, a year ago...nightly
Quote:
How often do you sleep at work or school?

Never...except at boarding school
Quote:
Besides home, where have you slept?

Friends/relatives, hotels, chalets, backpackers, dormitories tents, caravans, vans, cars, a toilet block in a disused drive in, beside a railway line, on a cemetery slab once.
Quote:
How often do you sleep somewhere noisy?

Rarely, and I need to be exhausted
Quote:
Can you sleep standing up or in a chair?

On a plane once
Quote:
How often do you have a sleepless night?

Fortnightly now
Quote:
How often do you pull an all nighter and what were you trying to accomplish?

Rarely...usually talking to a girl until sunrise....use your imagination.
Quote:
How well do you function sleep deprived

Not too badly for the first 4 days.
When initiating bupropion I had a month averaging 4 hours...per week.



bee33
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18 Oct 2024, 11:08 pm

Sleep is very very difficult for me. I probably have a diagnosable sleep disorder but I haven't been to see a sleep specialist in many years because they were absolutely useless. It's very difficult for me to fall asleep. In the best of circumstances it takes me maybe two hours to fall asleep, but sometimes I just can't sleep at all and will be up all night and into the next day. Therefore my sleep time gets later and later and I have no kind of regular sleep schedule. I can't work because I have chronic fatigue so I don't have a job, but if I did (if I could work) it would have to be a job where I work at home and set my own hours.



shortfatbalduglyman
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07 Nov 2024, 8:27 pm

usually sleep between 9pm and 4am. lately, been waking up 2am and not being able to sleep again until 3 f*****g am s**t.

usually 8-9am the most tired i am during the day. before work, on the way to work, or in the breakroom @ work. but ass hole workers don't care about anyone besides themselves and too busy making loud noises without good reasons. (rolls eyes). those idiots have way too many "rights" and i do not have the "right" to sleep. f**k those ass holes!



Elwyn
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08 Nov 2024, 12:47 am

I sometimes have difficulty falling asleep.

I cannot sleep anywhere noisy.

I experience bouts of sleepless nights, often fluctuating in line with my monthly hormonal changes.

I often feel weak and dizzy when I get less than 5 hours of sleep. And I will have no appetite the entire day.

I feel my best when I have 7 to 8 hours of sleep.



shortfatbalduglyman
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13 Nov 2024, 7:49 pm

past couple days, on the way to work, and between dinner and bedtime, f*****g exhausted. sleepy.

not going to be able to handle this job (or any other one) much longer s**t.

been applying for jobs for a longfuck time. a couple phone interviews and in person interviews. zero offers.

even if they did offer me a job, "at will" employer. they could have the nerve to make my worthless corpse redundant at any point, for any reason or no reason, s**t.

besides, litterbox.



BoundlessMind_32
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14 Nov 2024, 4:29 am

Sleeping never was a big issue, but...

I am a very sensitive person when it comes to the sleeping. I don't understand people who can fall asleep anywhere, any time while standing or sitting (like behind the desk).

I can only sleep in the room where I am alone. I can't stand the feeling when I sleep with someone in the room. My family keeps complaining why I don't want to sleep over at their place. Yeah, they have a 2 bedroom apartment, so no, thank you.

I need to sleep in a completely dark room, and even thought it's completely dark, I have to wear a sleeping mask. I can fall asleep without my rain and thunderstorm playlist but when I hear something like my neighbors for example, I have to put on my earphone with my playlist.

And lastly, I need to read a book before sleeping. And no, not a new book, but something I have already read. I am trying this way to calm down my brain and not keep it active.

People keep saying that this routine is too much, but what should I do then? Keep being sleep deprived?