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    This article is great. I was in a 6:30 pattern for months but left that. Think I'll start again ...Become an Early Riser

    It seems there are two main schools of thought about sleep patterns. One is that you should go to bed and get up at the same times every day. It’s like having an alarm clock on both ends — you try to sleep the same hours each night. This seems practical for living in modern society. We need predictability in our schedules. And we need to ensure adequate rest.

    The second school says you should listen to your body’s needs and go to bed when you’re tired and get up when you naturally wake up. This approach is rooted in biology. Our bodies should know how much rest we need, so we should listen to them.

    Through trial and error, I found out for myself that both of these schools are suboptimal sleep patterns. Both of them are wrong if you care about productivity. Here’s why:

    If you sleep set hours, you’ll sometimes go to bed when you aren’t sleepy enough. If it’s taking you more than five minutes to fall asleep each night, you aren’t sleepy enough. You’re wasting time lying in bed awake and not being asleep. Another problem is that you’re assuming you need the same number of hours of sleep every night, which is a false assumption. Your sleep needs vary from day to day.

    If you sleep based on what your body tells you, you’ll probably be sleeping more than you need — in many cases a lot more, like 10-15 hours more per week (the equivalent of a full waking day). A lot of people who sleep this way get 8+ hours of sleep per night, which is usually too much. Also, your mornings may be less predictable if you’re getting up at different times. And because our natural rhythms are sometimes out of tune with the 24-hour clock, you may find that your sleep times begin to drift.

    The optimal solution for me has been to combine both approaches. It’s very simple, and many early risers do this without even thinking about it, but it was a mental breakthrough for me nonetheless. The solution was to go to bed when I’m sleepy (and only when I’m sleepy) and get up with an alarm clock at a fixed time (7 days per week). So I always get up at the same time (in my case 5am), but I go to bed at different times every night.

    I go to bed when I’m too sleepy to stay up. My sleepiness test is that if I couldn’t read a book for more than a page or two without drifting off, I’m ready for bed. Most of the time when I go to bed, I’m asleep within three minutes. I lie down, get comfortable, and immediately I’m drifting off. Sometimes I go to bed at 9:30pm; other times I stay up until midnight. Most of the time I go to bed between 10-11pm. If I’m not sleepy, I stay up until I can’t keep my eyes open any longer. Reading is an excellent activity to do during this time, since it becomes obvious when I’m too sleepy to read.

    When my alarm goes off every morning, I turn it off, stretch for a couple seconds, and sit up. I don’t think about it. I’ve learned that the longer it takes me to get up, the more likely I am to try to sleep in. So I don’t allow myself to have conversations in my head about the benefits of sleeping in once the alarm goes off. Even if I want to sleep in, I always get up right away.

    After a few days of using this approach, I found that my sleep patterns settled into a natural rhythm. If I got too little sleep one night, I’d automatically be sleepier earlier and get more sleep the next night. And if I had lots of energy and wasn’t tired, I’d sleep less. My body learned when to knock me out because it knew I would always get up at the same time and that my wake-up time wasn’t negotiable.

    A side effect was that on average, I slept about 90 minutes less per night, but I actually felt more well-rested. I was sleeping almost the entire time I was in bed.

    I read that most insomniacs are people who go to bed when they aren’t sleepy. If you aren’t sleepy and find yourself unable to fall asleep quickly, get up and stay awake for a while. Resist sleep until your body begins to release the hormones that rob you of consciousness. If you simply go to bed when you’re sleepy and then get up at a fixed time, you’ll cure your insomnia. The first night you’ll stay up late, but you’ll fall asleep right away. You may be tired that first day from getting up too early and getting only a few hours of sleep the whole night, but you’ll slog through the day and will want to go to bed earlier that second night. After a few days, you’ll settle into a pattern of going to bed at roughly the same time and falling asleep right away.

    So if you want to become an early riser (or just exert more control over your sleep patterns), then try this: Go to bed only when you’re too sleepy to stay up, and get up at a fixed time every morning.

    Check out this website I found at StevePavlina.com

    There's a followup article linked from the bottom of steve's post.

    UPDATE:

    Here is an image of Ben Franklin's daily schedule. Ted sent it to me yesterday and it offers some structure to a 5AM schedule. I'll admit, on day 1, I was thinking, "Okay, I'm up. Knowone else is; not even the sun. Now what?". Today (day 3) I was contriving my day at 7AM to begin at 8AM. This feels more productive.

    Ben Franklin's Daily Schedule

     

    Tags » bad habits ben franklin benefits change daily routine early rising getting up early good habit habits how-to schedule staying up late
    • 4 September 2009
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    Comments 7 Comments

    Sep 08, 2009
    suchpower said...
    I'm gonna try this...
    Sep 09, 2009
    Scott Bratcher said...
    I'm on day 3 of rising at 5AM. Learned that the last hour I stayed up past tired last night was paid for this AM.
    Sep 09, 2009
    Scott Bratcher said...
    Dom joined me on day 1 and @tkaemming joined me this morning. Hasn't been completely lonely. tkaemming gave me the Ben Franklin image I added to the post above.
    Sep 22, 2009
    Scott Bratcher said...
    I'm really liking this schedule.

    So, an update. Week one went very smoothly and 5AM wake-up time is working out very pleasantly. I use my iPhone alarm to awaken me at 5:10 with an alarm if I'm not awake naturally at 5AM. I've disabled snooze to keep away from that endless trap. My approach: awaken, kill the alarm, stretch, hit the shower... seems to be working.

    The first weekend I strayed from the 5AM time from staying up too late, I was too tempted to stay up and hang with family and friends. But recovered easily to continue the 5AM schedule the following work week.

    The following weekend I strayed again and actually slept in on Sunday until 8AM. This kind of jacked me up and made Monday very difficult to rise early, even at 6:30. A 6AM meeting on that Tuesday helped get me back to 5AM, but didn't leave much time to "conspire my day". The remainder of the week went smoothly.

    This past weekend I strayed again and yesterday I didn't rise until 6AM. That late start wasn't too hard to recover from, but today I'm back to 5AM. All in all, about 17 days from starting this new schedule, I fully intend to keep it up. My productivity is enhanced and although the hardest part is making sure I go to bed when I'm tired I feel like it's a great schedule to keep.

    Like unto the daily proclamation of the Dread Pirate Roberts, "I'll most likely abandon this whole thing in the morning."

    Sep 22, 2009
    Philip Bowles said...
    I've been setting my alarm for 6:00; it has me turning in earlier than I normally would at night, but I'm feeling much much better, on the whole! It's no good when I started yawning at 7:00 PM last night, though. Irregular weekend schedules definitely wreak havoc on this system.
    Sep 22, 2009
    Taylor Baldwin said...
    I've always been interested in how our sleep schedules should take into account sleep patterns and ultimately provide for greater efficiency in the use of our time and motivation. So this post was very enlightening. When I was in high school, I started getting up at 5:30. I just fell asleep when I was tired and woke up at the same daily time. As I entered college this habit fell by the wayside. By the time I graduated and was starting my masters degree program, I was also starting up my piano studio. My time became so filled with teaching that if I were to include any practice time or workout in the day, it would only fit in the early morning. So this summer I started getting up around 6:00 everyday. I've been able to fit more in the day, but I'm still dealing with making the best use of my time in the morning. I've found that if I go to bed with the first thing scheduled for the next day, I can get up and focus my mind on finishing that first task as quickly as possible. This usually gave me the momentum to get through the next several tasks. I get hung up when I have unplanned time in the day, though. I might revert back to an old rule I had: "Out of the house by 7am." This allows me to finish my workout and rush to get onto my day, instead of getting distracted with TV or internet. Anyway, thanks for sharing. Keep us updated on what's bound to be a never-ending pursuit of efficiency and discipline.
    Sep 22, 2009
    Scott Bratcher said...
    @philip
    I've been taking this "yawning at 7pm" in my own situation as a sign that I need to catch up on sleep a little. Making myself actually climb into bed at 8PM has been a whole different matter. Hasn't quite happened yet, even though I know I probably should to actually give this system a fair chance. The rule is go to be when you are tired. Tired as in, you can actually lay down and go to sleep. My guess is that I would really enjoy a couple extra hours of sleep an awaken extremely refreshed, clear-headed and ready to contrive a highly productive day.

    @Taylor
    I know what you mean about that. This tendency for social and academic life situations to encroach upon this sleep schedule came up when @tkaemming and I were talking about it for ourselves. One defense we had was that we wanted to spend time with our friends and hang out doing actvities that we often only performed in late night ours, such as Xbox, drinks, internet browsing or TV.

    We arrived at a counter argument that leaving that schedule, although at first glance appeared to be a loss, was actually a gain because of how unproductive these people and activities actually can be for our life goals. What do we accomplish in 4 hours of XBox that can't be achieved with 1 hour in the evening's "distractions" as put forward in Ben Franklin's schedule above.

    I noticed the first week that I was on this schedule that the type of person I saw at the store, the post office, the coffeeshop or spotted driving on the road was often the type of person that has goals and ambition and generally looks like they get or have gotten things done in a successful life. It was something of an eye opener.

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    This is another merging stream of the binary me. It may at times collide or overlap with the real me.

    About Me:
    I love to travel, then return home. In projects, I dig the details, when they compliment the greater perspective. I adore good design and applaud inspired implementation. Simplicity is king; functionally and in form.

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