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Sarm Research SolutionsUGFREAKeudomestic
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Difficulty waking after getting enough sleep

I guess I'll get used to it. This morning was especially difficult.

Maybe I'll start paying attention to see if it's more difficult to get up the morning after the days that I train.
...chad...
 
Yah, I know what you mean. But I am in a pattern now of getting enough sleep, so no worries for me.

I sleep 7.5-9 hours per night. I find it very difficult to sleep more or less than this.
 
Cheese, how big is your neck?

I have suffered from sleep apnea, until recently undiagnosed, for a long time now. Anyone with more than a 17 inch neck is at risk for this disorder.

Basically you quit breathing in your sleep, and you can never get to a deep enough sleep to get refreshed. Mine was so severe that I would wake up choking from it. However a more mild form might be screwing with your sleep, but not so much that you actually completely wake up.

The reason you wake up, is that your body knows it is being starved for oxygen, and forces you to wake up so you will start breathing again.

B.
 
casualbb said:
Psychology textbook answer:

Between hours 3 and 5 of sleep, the sleep patterns shift from mostly stage 4 sleep to REM sleep. REM sleep indicates a state of extreme mental activity and dreaming, from which it is difficult to be roused.

Most humans will sleep 9 to 10 hours if left alone (Stanley Coren, 1996).

"Given such sleep, they do not become groggy later. Rather, long sleepers awake refreshed, sustain better moods, and perform more efficient and accurate work than do people who get less sleep. People who sleep less than 7 hours often show signs of sleep deprivation--depressed immune system, poorer judgments, irritability, and more accidents."

Who the hell are you calling Irritable:D Kidding I only sleep between 4-6hours per night. That is my basic pattern for about 11 years now. Even is I have no interuptions and nothing to do I won't sleep more than 7 hours. About one every two to three months I will sleep for more one night maybe it is like my polar bear hybernation cycle. I don't feel it effects me negatively, so maybe i just don't need more sleep. Also I do find that when I sleep longer that I have more trouble waking and becoming alert, there again probably just my weird physiology.

Cheers,
Scotsman
 
benchmonster said:
Cheese, how big is your neck?
My neck is around 17.5 inches.

And while I've never been to the doctor about it, I have known for years that I have sleep apnea. I often quit breathing in my sleep. I don't realize it, but everyone that has ever been around me while I am sleeping usually freaks out the first time it happens.

So, you think the sleep apnea has something to do with it? Hmmm...
...chad...
 
sleep is good. i hav ehad this problem in the past few days to. i been hittin the gym hard and getting 10 hours of sleep or so but just dosnt feel lik enough. jsut a few weeks ago i was sleepin the same and jumping out of bed. i dont get it either. but iknow if i go to sleep and no disturebed i sleep for a good 14-16 hours sometimes maye there is somethin wrong with me:( . one time i slept for 24 hours i woke a few times to pee and drink some water but as soon as i hti the pillow i was out and dint wake up for another 6 horus or so. makes no sense. i quit thinking about it and just go to bed early and wake up when i do as long as it is before my alarm then i can hop up. no going back to sleep once i wake up that makes it horrible to get up.
 
I go to bed stupid early. I get up around 4:30-5:00am to get to work at 6:30 or 7:00am, but I get off at 3:30pm.
I try to get about 8-9hrs a night, so I TRY to go to bed around 8:00-9:00pm.

My dad has the sleep apnea thing. He sleeps with one of those breating machines on.
He loves that thing. He said he sleeps so much "deeper" with it.

I read in a study long ago that sleep periods go in about 3 hour cycles.
So people often feel the best sleeping 6 or 9 hours
(multiples of 3).
These were probably normal size people though. ;)
 
There also exists the concept of "sleep debt." Essentially, when one is sleep deprived for any length of time, one needs several nights of oversleep to normalize.

They did an experiment, they basically paid some test subjects to stay in bed for 16 hours. They found that during the first few days, most subject actually slept for 12 or more hours. By the end of the week they had normalized back to 8-9. So, Scotsman, if you've been getting 4-6 for as long as you can remember, your sleep credit rating is like F :D go take a nap buddy
 
I believe in the sleep debt theory. I pretty much had a huge "credit line" during college and when I was traveling.

After a few nights....it would even out though.
 
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