theautisticcoach,
@theautisticcoach@neurodifferent.me avatar

How many hours of sleep do my comrades get every night on average?

@actuallyautistic

nddev,
@nddev@blob.cat avatar

@theautisticcoach

In normal times, I get a pretty repeatable 5½ hours a night. That's with every piece of sleep hygiene I can think of, plus CBD to take the edge off the day and help me relax into sleep.

It's not enough. I can't stay asleep. I get up every day exhausted.

My circadian rhythm is a bit syncopated. 🙂 I'm groggy in the mornings, sleepy in the early afternoon (unless I'm fasting), and only really alert from early evening onwards. By late evening, I'm raring to go -- and that's when I'm supposed to close my eyes and go to sleep.

My sleep is a train wreck.

When there's stress, as there has been recently, with a death in the family, I sleep even less well. I've been getting 4½ to 5 hours' sleep recently. I've been considering taking an afternoon nap, like the old man I am, but it doesn't really fit into the work schedule. I haven't succumbed yet. 🙂

@actuallyautistic

nddev,
@nddev@blob.cat avatar

@theautisticcoach

Oh yeah, and fairly often, I sleep backwards. You know how your sleep is supposed to start deep and gradually get shallower throughout the night? Yeah. Often mine gets deeper and deeper until it's time to get up. No wonder I wake up groggy!

@actuallyautistic

GreenRoc,
@GreenRoc@mastodon.social avatar

@theautisticcoach @actuallyautistic

If not interrupted by neighbor noise, and subtract "night" from your question, I would say, 6-8 hours with an occasional break after 4 hours to pee.

My current "sleep" doesnt happen "nightly". I seem to have an estimated 27 hour circadian rhythm cycle (not 24 hour)

Also, my 8hr sleep time for me did not exist 5 years ago. Before I received gabapentin, 4 hours without REM sleep was my average.

Now, I go sleep whenever I feel like sleeping.

GreenRoc,
@GreenRoc@mastodon.social avatar

@theautisticcoach @actuallyautistic 4 hour without rem sleep was awful, I would wake up feeling more tired than before I went to bed.

Gabapentin has been vitally important for me to finally get enough rest when I sleep. Also I sleep in a recliner (not flat), and I must not be disturbed by noises or alarms to get that decent, feels-good-enough sleep. Unpleasant temperatures and other physical irritants (disliked scents, textures, pains, etc) can negatively impact my rest quality and length.

GreenRoc,
@GreenRoc@mastodon.social avatar

@theautisticcoach @actuallyautistic

If I lie in a horizontal/flat position, I experience something called "Alice in Wonderland Syndrome" which makes me feel dizzy as the room feels like it's wobbling around like I'm laying on a hard surface in a room made of wobbling jell-o. (vertigo, I believe, is the name of the dizzying sensation)

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