Page 1 of 1 [ 3 posts ] 

shortfatbalduglyman
Veteran
Veteran

Joined: 4 Mar 2017
Age: 41
Gender: Male
Posts: 10,750

10 Mar 2025, 11:17 pm

What makes it easier or harder for you to sleep?

What kind of sleeping pills have you taken? How well did they work?

How long is the longest you have gone without sleep?

What kind of things did sleep deprivation make you do?

When you pulled an all nighter, what were you doing?

When you could not sleep all night long, why not?



ToughDiamond
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 15 Sep 2008
Age: 72
Gender: Male
Posts: 12,897

11 Mar 2025, 1:29 am

What makes it easier or harder for you to sleep?
Harder: Usually having a nice long lie-in the previous morning, and not getting enough fresh air and exercise. Possibly staring too long at TV and computer screens.
Easier: The converse - getting up early on the previous morning, getting lots of fresh air and exercise, not using computers or watching TV much.

What kind of sleeping pills have you taken? How well did they work?
Never took any. I've heard they don't give the quality of sleep that's necessary, and I'm wary of pharmaceutical potions. I've got some melatonin tablets somewhere but I've not tried them yet. They seem to be fairly safe. I've been known to use CBD, and in large amounts it seems to help me sleep, but it's too expensive to use very often.

How long is the longest you have gone without sleep?
Just over 48 hours if I remember right. Bloody airlines screwed up the flights, and didn't give me the help I needed to get me to a free hotel overnight, so I sat about in the airport and there's nowhere to lie down. And even when the flights run properly, it's a long way I have to travel. And I can't sleep on a plane.

What kind of things did sleep deprivation make you do?
I was getting visual and auditory hallucinations by the end of it. Not really psychosis, but definitely illusions. I kept seeing things out of the corner of my eye and my perception told me they were people, but they were just objects, and I was hearing music in engine and fan noise.

When you pulled an all nighter, what were you doing?
See above. Beyond that I very rarely fail to get at least a few hours of sleep per night.

When you could not sleep all night long, why not?
See "What makes it easier or harder for you to sleep?" above. Plus sometimes I think it's because I've been thinking too hard for too long just before bedtime, or I'm excited about something, or worried about something that I can't see a solution for.



PrivatePyle99
Blue Jay
Blue Jay

User avatar

Joined: 3 May 2016
Gender: Male
Posts: 92
Location: UK

03 Apr 2025, 3:55 pm

What makes it harder? Definitely overthinking and being on screens too late. Silence helps, but only when my brain's not being loud.

I've tried zopiclone and over-the-counter stuff like Nytol. Zopiclone knocked me out but made me groggy for hours the next day.

Longest without sleep? Around 60 hours. By the end, I was saying weird stuff and couldn't follow basic conversations.

Sleep deprivation made me zone out in the middle of tasks, like I'd walk into a room and completely forget why I was there.

Pulled all-nighters mostly for work or when I was stuck in my own head. And when I couldn't sleep at all, it was always stress.

Now I keep a couple strains around that are good for sleep and some of them genuinely work better than anything else I've tried. These weed strains are what I recommend.


_________________
"A feller wiser than myself once said, sometimes you eat the bear, and sometimes the bear, well, he eats you."
The Stranger - The Big Lebowski

Your neurodiverse (Aspie) score: 140 of 200
Your neurotypical (non-autistic) score: 59 of 200
You are very likely neurodiverse (Aspie)