Napping At Work [modified]
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One assumes a nap room is needed when people pull all nighters, not for an 8 hour work day ?
Christian Graus Driven to the arms of OSX by Vista. Read my blog to find out how I've worked around bugs in Microsoft tools and frameworks.
Actually, studies show that a 10-15 minute nap is a real performance boost for an 8 hour work day. Of course, it varies between individuals. Some need it, some don't. To pull a 12 hour work day, a short nap decides if my last 2 hours are going to be productive or not.
-- Kein Mitleid Für Die Mehrheit
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I have a friend who claims that meditation is something like 5x more effective than sleep and says he should be able to get by on 2 hours of meditation a day. I'm not entirely sure I believe him.
AspDotNetDev wrote:
...and says he should be able to get by on 2 hours of meditation a day...
Seems like a stretch to me. I was of course lying thru my teeth in my previous post. I sleep at least 4-6 hours a night. Since I've never meditated, I have no clue how it might serve as a replacement for sleep. But I'd bet your buddy is dozing off during his meditation sessions. ;)
Everybody SHUT UP until I finish my coffee...
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No I haven't. That is just the way I have always been (at least as far as I can remember). I usually need about 9.5 hours to feel fully rested. If a few hours is taken off that, I drag through the day.
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If you're in a salaried position where you can work autonomously most of the time, then there should be nothing wrong in taking naps (or long lunch breaks, coming in and leaving when you want to) as long as the work allocated to you gets done in the required timescale. It's a trust thing, though. Especially in larger companies, they worry as some people would certainly take advantage by napping all day, partying all night, then fighting against dismissal by claiming it was encouraged by the company having a nap room. Now, if they had a bonking room ...
___________________________________________ .\\axxx (That's an 'M')
_Maxxx_ wrote:
Now, if they had a bonking room ...
There's no need for one, my Missus and I have done it at 3 of my last 5 work places. Need to cross this current place off the list so I am at 80%.
Michael Martin Australia "I controlled my laughter and simple said "No,I am very busy,so I can't write any code for you". The moment they heard this all the smiling face turned into a sad looking face and one of them farted. So I had to leave the place as soon as possible." - Mr.Prakash One Fine Saturday. 24/04/2004
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Guilty! I mean, er, infected. Uh, symptomatic?
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Actually, studies show that a 10-15 minute nap is a real performance boost for an 8 hour work day. Of course, it varies between individuals. Some need it, some don't. To pull a 12 hour work day, a short nap decides if my last 2 hours are going to be productive or not.
-- Kein Mitleid Für Die Mehrheit
Somewhere I read that the human body was actually designed to sleep twice a day albeit one of those periods is an hour or so after noon. The problem is that society has driven us with a work ethic. At an internal development workshop I went to I learned that sleeping on the job is considered insubordination. Looks like I'll have to be more careful when I work through lunch. I'm a 1:00 AM to 7:00 AM sleeper but if I can grab a nap at lunch in my car I do it even though I'd rather be reading a technical book (or a comic.)
I'm not a programmer but I play one at the office
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No nap-room here. Although, cubilce is fairly large so I can doze off if I want to, but I generally don't.
Hmm, Bedroom is approx 3ft from the office...
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No I haven't. That is just the way I have always been (at least as far as I can remember). I usually need about 9.5 hours to feel fully rested. If a few hours is taken off that, I drag through the day.
Good luck if you ever have kids! I am in an awesome mood today because I actually got eight hours sleep last night. That's my longest ever sleep since my daughter was born last March!
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Good luck if you ever have kids! I am in an awesome mood today because I actually got eight hours sleep last night. That's my longest ever sleep since my daughter was born last March!
TomChantler wrote:
Good luck if you ever have kids!
I intend to avoid that. I wouldn't survive the first week. ;P
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Straw poll: how many of you have a nap room or take naps at work? 5-vote this post if there be sleeping at your work, 1-vote this post if there's no :baaaa!: for your cow-orkers. When I worked for a startup company, we had a nap room, and it was glorious. Now that I work for a bigger company, it seems like something like that wouldn't fly (instead, I just doze off at my desk after lunch). Though, I have a fairly large cubicle, so I'm thinking of bringing in a cot, pillow, and blanket. EDIT: After 10 1-votes, might be good for somebody to 5-vote this post before it gets automatically removed. Thanks, looks like I have an upvote.
modified on Tuesday, February 8, 2011 4:51 PM
I voted 3. One of our offices has nothing of the sort - the other has a sick bay that employees can use to have a nap in the event of a real long shift. current project has seen us work from 9 am till 4 am several times a week, with the occasional all-nighter thrown in for good measure. On sleeping patterns, apparently there is a technique where you can train yourself to fall into REM very quickly. Supposedly you only need 2h of REM a day, and once trained, you can pretty much fall into it instantly. then, you just have a 20 min nap every 4h and you get the full amount of rest you need each day! i'd love to try it, but current work/lifestyle doesn't permit it. the idea of only sleeping 2h a day does appeal though! then i'd only be at work 75% of my awake hours, not 95%!
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I put an idea into the suggestion scheme at work to have one, but it was denied. Power naps are very good for you, and having a power nap and a coffee can boost mental performance by quite a lot. Power napping can also undo the damage of a disrupted nights sleep. I've worked with quite a few old fellas who doze off at their desks after lunch. And a girl I know who is a journalist, there is a bloke in her office who every lunchtime gets out a sleeping bag and goes to sleep under his desk for half an hour, feet sticking out and everything.
Every man can tell how many goats or sheep he possesses, but not how many friends.
ChrisElston wrote:
there is a bloke in her office who every lunchtime gets out a sleeping bag and goes to sleep under his desk for half an hour, feet sticking out and everything.
He goes into his sleeping bag head first?
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I voted 3. One of our offices has nothing of the sort - the other has a sick bay that employees can use to have a nap in the event of a real long shift. current project has seen us work from 9 am till 4 am several times a week, with the occasional all-nighter thrown in for good measure. On sleeping patterns, apparently there is a technique where you can train yourself to fall into REM very quickly. Supposedly you only need 2h of REM a day, and once trained, you can pretty much fall into it instantly. then, you just have a 20 min nap every 4h and you get the full amount of rest you need each day! i'd love to try it, but current work/lifestyle doesn't permit it. the idea of only sleeping 2h a day does appeal though! then i'd only be at work 75% of my awake hours, not 95%!
Napping can also be a time for Hijinks :laugh: http://my.opera.com/TenSigmaPlatinumBeltNinja/blog/2011/01/26/great-ways-to-wake-up-the-sleeper-in-your-office?cid=54005001#comment54005001[^]
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Straw poll: how many of you have a nap room or take naps at work? 5-vote this post if there be sleeping at your work, 1-vote this post if there's no :baaaa!: for your cow-orkers. When I worked for a startup company, we had a nap room, and it was glorious. Now that I work for a bigger company, it seems like something like that wouldn't fly (instead, I just doze off at my desk after lunch). Though, I have a fairly large cubicle, so I'm thinking of bringing in a cot, pillow, and blanket. EDIT: After 10 1-votes, might be good for somebody to 5-vote this post before it gets automatically removed. Thanks, looks like I have an upvote.
modified on Tuesday, February 8, 2011 4:51 PM
In the past when I've been in cubicle city not having anywhere to crash out for half an hour at lunchtime when I really needed it was a real pain. I can't speak for anyone else, but when I'm tired enough to want to do that (which happens more than I'd care to admit if I have to commute) not being able to really kills my productivity. I'm honestly surprised more employers don't realise how much productivity they must be wasting by not providing staff with such facilities These days it's not so much of an issue for me as I have a room with a double bed 30 ft from my office (OK, so it's a home office... :-\ ).
Anna :rose: Tech Blog | Visual Lint "Why would anyone prefer to wield a weapon that takes both hands at once, when they could use a lighter (and obviously superior) weapon that allows you to wield multiple ones at a time, and thus supports multi-paradigm carnage?"
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Napping can also be a time for Hijinks :laugh: http://my.opera.com/TenSigmaPlatinumBeltNinja/blog/2011/01/26/great-ways-to-wake-up-the-sleeper-in-your-office?cid=54005001#comment54005001[^]
At least they don't have my Bosses favourite if you start snoring you get some object (typically a molex psu header chucked at you) mind you with flex time that is not very lightly!
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Ahh, then it must be related to a DAU DAU definition /dow/ [German Fidonet] Dümmster Anzunehmender User. A German acronym for stupidest imaginable user. From the engineering-slang GAU for Größter Anzunehmender Unfall (worst foreseeable accident), especially of a LNG tank farm plant or something with similarly disastrous consequences. In popular German, GAU is used only to refer to worst-case nuclear accidents such as a core meltdown.
A while ago he asked me what he should have printed on my business cards. I said 'Wizard'. I read books which nobody else understand. Then I do something which nobody understands. After that the computer does something which nobody understands. When asked, I say things about the results which nobody understand. But everybody expects miracles from me on a regular basis. Looks to me like the classical definition of a wizard.
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Straw poll: how many of you have a nap room or take naps at work? 5-vote this post if there be sleeping at your work, 1-vote this post if there's no :baaaa!: for your cow-orkers. When I worked for a startup company, we had a nap room, and it was glorious. Now that I work for a bigger company, it seems like something like that wouldn't fly (instead, I just doze off at my desk after lunch). Though, I have a fairly large cubicle, so I'm thinking of bringing in a cot, pillow, and blanket. EDIT: After 10 1-votes, might be good for somebody to 5-vote this post before it gets automatically removed. Thanks, looks like I have an upvote.
modified on Tuesday, February 8, 2011 4:51 PM
Hi! I used to work a place where I felt like sleeping right after lunch, in that firm there was "free" lunch. The lunch was quite nice and "heavy". That was infact my first place of work right after studies. Now I have worked many places and never felt this urge to sleep right after lunch. I have come to the conclusion that the reason why I felt like this after lunch was because of the food that was served at that firm.
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Hi! I used to work a place where I felt like sleeping right after lunch, in that firm there was "free" lunch. The lunch was quite nice and "heavy". That was infact my first place of work right after studies. Now I have worked many places and never felt this urge to sleep right after lunch. I have come to the conclusion that the reason why I felt like this after lunch was because of the food that was served at that firm.
I've been suffering recently from overwhelming drowsiness in the afternoon at my work desk. If I let myself I could slip right into a sleep - still sitting up - and once or twice my head has nodded and I panic wake up as I realise sleep is imminent. It feels like a sign of weakness to succumb to this - visble to colleagues who while they might even sometimes feel drowsy too - would still love to attack this point of vulnerability when exhibited in others. Here's what has helped: - I've stopped eating at the Thai restaurant at lunch, instead I bring in sandwiches and an apple and maybe some yoghurt. The lighter meal has stopped the onset of drowsiness. - If I am feeling sleepy in the morning (or had a late night) I drive my car round to the back of a warehouse, recline the seat back and go to sleep for about 30 minutes at lunch. It helps a lot. Set the alarm on your phone to wake up so that you don't need to keep checking the time. - You can also go to the bathroom and splash face with cold water if desperate. - If really desperate - have another coffee and load it with sugar. But the worst thing is not being able to just have a nap. If you can, it is bliss.
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Wow - 7 hours of sleep and you're dozing off ? Have you thought about seeing a doctor about your sleep issues ?
Christian Graus Driven to the arms of OSX by Vista. Read my blog to find out how I've worked around bugs in Microsoft tools and frameworks.
The amount of sleep required by a person to feel fully rested (assuming you get all of your sleep in 1 large chunk) makes a very nice bell curve with about 2% of people needing less than 4 hours and 2% needing about 12 hours. People on the left side tend to call people on the right lazy, but it isn't something controllable or trainable. Most of the evidence points to it being a nature rather than nurture type of thing. I fall in the 9-hour category, which didn't leave me as much time as I liked in my day, so I moved over to the Uberman sleep schedule. I was able to do this because I work at a small company whose conference room now doubles as my nap room. -- TM
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Straw poll: how many of you have a nap room or take naps at work? 5-vote this post if there be sleeping at your work, 1-vote this post if there's no :baaaa!: for your cow-orkers. When I worked for a startup company, we had a nap room, and it was glorious. Now that I work for a bigger company, it seems like something like that wouldn't fly (instead, I just doze off at my desk after lunch). Though, I have a fairly large cubicle, so I'm thinking of bringing in a cot, pillow, and blanket. EDIT: After 10 1-votes, might be good for somebody to 5-vote this post before it gets automatically removed. Thanks, looks like I have an upvote.
modified on Tuesday, February 8, 2011 4:51 PM
AspDotNetDev wrote:
EDIT: After 10 1-votes, might be good for somebody to 5-vote this post before it gets automatically removed. Thanks, looks like I have an upvote.
That only happens from votes to remove, not 1 votes.... I've never done it, but one of my coworkers naps in his car over lunch sometimes when the weather is nice...
3x12=36 2x12=24 1x12=12 0x12=18
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One assumes a nap room is needed when people pull all nighters, not for an 8 hour work day ?
Christian Graus Driven to the arms of OSX by Vista. Read my blog to find out how I've worked around bugs in Microsoft tools and frameworks.
A 15 minute nap just after lunch is proven to increase productivity and awareness. That's because we humans were designed to have two sleep periods, the regular one at night and another just after noon. But modern day life does not allow that and pretty much everyone feels sleepy about that time of the day. The 15 minute nap is just enough to pass through REM sleep (4th stage of the sleep cycles) and reach the 1st stage of sleep which you're barely asleep. Waking up on that stage will make you wake up aware, ready and refreshened. One technique is to take a cup of coffee a few minutes before (don't remember how many) the nap, so it kicks in after 15 minutes of nap. I wish I had a link to an article, but if you google around, you'll find plenty of evidence supporting what I am saying.