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Sleep is one of the most important factors that contribute to our health, yet it’s so easily neglected. I used to be a big culprit! Countless late nights where I’ve told myself, “Another few hours of work is okay.” And work wasn’t the only excuse. Sometimes it was a basketball game, a movie, or doom scrolling on Twitter.
I’d average 6 hours of sleep, 7 if I was lucky. I did have a couple of good habits in the mix: no devices in the bedroom, and no snoozing. Without distractions in bed, falling asleep was fairly quick. To avoid snoozing, I placed an analog alarm clock in the bathroom so when it went off, I had to get out of bed to turn it off. Since I was functioning fine during the day, I never thought much about getting more sleep. I’d just tell myself, “I’ll make it up on the weekend.”
When we took our sabbatical, I made it a goal to prioritize sleep and aim for the recommended 8 hours. For a couple of months, I didn’t use an alarm, just to see how my body would react. How much sleep did I really need?
Turns out it depended on a variety of factors such as the activity levels for that day, what I ate, when I slept, screen time and much more. Some days I woke up naturally after 7 hours. Other days, I was out cold for 9. It made me realize there isn’t a magic number.
Now that I’m back in a startup environment, the priorities are piling up but sleep has not taken a toll. I’ve kept it a priority. Sticking to a nightly routine of stretching, reflecting on the day, and winding down has helped. I’m by no means perfect. There are bad days. But being more intentional about what I do before bed has made a difference.
Do you have a nighttime routine? How much sleep do you get?
120 sats \ 4 replies \ @398ja 25 May
I recently purchased an oura ring. It's a health device you wear on your finger, it measures all sorts of things, including sleep, and you can use its integrated ai to analyse your results. It's a cool gadget. I'm happy to share here a comprehensive summary of my recent sleep activity:
Your recent sleep shows strong improvement mid-week, peaking at a high Sleep Score, longer sleep duration, and consistent deep/REM sleep. Sleep efficiency has mostly been good except for some variability.
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I really would like to have one of these but the prospect of having to audit and sandbox their app has been a major barrier that I'm not ready to jump at yet.
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100 sats \ 1 reply \ @398ja 26 May
I understand. I studied their ToS to the best of my abilities, and decided to go for it. They promise not to sell customer data, or share them without explicit consent. As long as you limit third party integrations, you're relatively safe. It's a great tool, full of valuable insights...
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Yeah. ToS worthless if they get hacked, or if they break it anyway and go to jail SBF style. They definitely will not have the budget to compensate me the 5k BTC my health information is worth to me.
By my judgment, it's not worth it for them to take the risk really, and therefore, if I ever get time, I shall help protect them from this inevitable outcome by completely eradicating all data sharing in their software, because they cannot eff up if they have none of my data. Win-win.
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Cool, I used the whoop for a year and then stopped paying the subscription.
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20 sats \ 1 reply \ @aljaz 26 May
I tend to sleep around 7-7.5h on average. I have started to keep fairly fixed bedtime around 10pm and i'm up and about around 5:30-6ish almost every morning. I dont use alarms at all.
I've noticed that if i wake up for any reason after I have already slept for more than 6h it will be very hard for me to fall back asleep and i tend to give up quickly (if the hour is not too unreasonably early) and just go about my day.
I usually do some reading the first thing i wake up in the morning, and then some light workout like cardio (i like to get a quick sweat on for starting the day and stretching/mild core stuff)
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Thanks for sharing, I've noticed an earlier bedtime has helped me for sure. I'm trying to be more conscious of stretching and taking a cool shower in the morning to start the day.
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I shoot for 8 I land on 6 to 5.5 unfortunately
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Same. Oddly I've been sleeping less as I've gotten older.
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Around 6.5 h every night, but more would be better for me. Sometimes I get to take a nap with one of the kids after lunch, that feels nice :)
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I don't nap much, maybe I should work that in to the routine.
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20 sats \ 0 replies \ @Jer 26 May
Usually 8 hours at night and 30 mins to 60 mins, mid day.
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I do agree that shooting for 8 is ideal, but I think optimal range differs from person to person. 7-9hours is typical. I think what’s most important is consistency on when you go to sleep and wake up and the quality of sleep. Meaning uninterrupted sleep so your brain can go through the cycles and clean out the “junk”. If you’re waking up a lot throughout the night, it means something making you restless.
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The ideal, according to science, is to sleep 8 hours a day. I wish I could sleep that many hours, but I'm currently sleeping only 5 hours. I need to change my sleep habits.
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If you’re interest and like to read or perhaps get the audiobook. There’s a good book on sleep called “Why we sleep” by Matthew Walker. It’s an interesting read.
And to add to that, another big factor to quality of sleep is how we breathe. Most of us breathe shallowly because our fascia and muscles around our rib cages and bellies are really restricted. Learning to breathe deep and while keeping abdominal pressure is tricky for most.
James Nestor has a book called Breath, which is also a good read.
Incorporating a relaxed deep breathing practice before bed with some relaxing music is a good way to ease into a restful slumber. 😁
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Will check it out, thanks for sharing!
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10 sats \ 0 replies \ @sox 26 May
I found that 8 hours is a good rule of thumb and 6 hours is the bare minimum. Sleep is different for each one of us: 8 hours makes me a zombie but 7 hours is the sweet spot for me.
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Not much with an infant!
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10 sats \ 1 reply \ @fm 26 May
Just like bitcoin, lot less than i need.. Never enough..
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I've been prioritizing sleep lately and consistently get about 7 hours and 10 minutes each night. Resting well has made a noticeable difference in my daily energy and focus. It's encouraging to see others valuing sleep too!
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I go to bed when I'm tired and read a book and wake up when I wake up. My body gets as much sleep as it wants, I only use an alarm when I absolutely have to. Something between six and eight hours.
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8.5 and feel great!
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not enough, and not consistently enough!
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In my case, I sleep about 6 hours approximately, and I feel better than when I have slept 8 hours.
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i understood with the time that we have to listen our body (avoid to listen science that is saying that we have to sleep to 8h or 7h or whatever).
meditation or relax technic help me to find the sleep
i sleep from 4 hours to 7 hours by night
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