Over-Worked or Under-Rested
I overheard the following conversation the other day in a large group of women.
“Wow your skin looks really good, did you have some work done?”
“Uh, no. But I have been prioritizing getting some more sleep the last few months and feel like its really helped, thanks”
“Sleep? Seriously? Must be nice, I average 5 hours a sleep a night with work, the kids and just getting everything done”
To which two other women chimed in the following comments, “You are amazing how you get everything done” “I wish I could get half as much done with 5 hours of sleep” and it went on and on. How did a compliment about skin tone become sleep shaming? Is it more acceptable to have “work done” then to get sleep?
We all “know” the recommendation is to get about 8 hours of uninterrupted sleep a night. We “know” there are associated health benefits including reduction of dark circles, better cognitive functioning, better appetite control to name a few. The problem, however, is we are not encouraged to get sleep in our culture. TV shows depict geniuses that require little to no sleep, interviews on finding work/ home balance with successful men and women who talk about how they get up at 4 am so they can work out, get two hours of work in before anyone is up, do family in the evening and then go back to work again until wee hours. Celebrities are interviewed about how they stay so youthful and stunning. When they list 8-10 hours of sleep a night, we shun them as out of touch. We herald our friends and family who can do it all with little sleep. We compliment them, make a big deal about it or at least sympathize with them. When was the last time you asked someone how they were and they said “Good, I’ve been sleeping well and I feel great”? You don't because we as a culture do not respond well to that. Instead people share how little they got- almost as a badge of honor.
We hear a lot that we are all over worked. We probably are, but the problem is that when we look at why we are worn out as over worked, we focus on how to reduce our work load. When we are successful, even lets say for a 30 minute block, what do we fill it with is often some new task, TV watching, going out with friends. We don't fill it with more sleep. That is because we have defined the problem as too much work, not a lack of sleep.
I like to recommend that people ask themselves, “Am I over worked or simply under rested?” We might be both, but given the known benefits of sleep, focusing on that can have potentially a significant impact on the rest of our lives. Changing our behavioral habits rarely is effective when the focus is on doing less of something. Focusing on a replacement behavior or new behavior is key. Eating less chips is pointless if I do not have a better alternative snack to focus on, I am hungry, stressed, bored etc. So just “eating less” is not going to be something I sustain. I can try to reduce tasks on my schedule, but I am tired, busy and people count on me, so doing it less won’t sustain unless I get more sleep and can truly become more effective during the day with my current tasks.
The same strategies for getting more sleep are ones most of us already use for things like getting our workout in, eating healthier, spending more quality time with friends and family. We create an initial realistic goal, plan to work toward our goal, schedule time to make sure it happens and set new goals as we reach previous goals. I do not personally know anyone who has in their calendar blocked off when they are sleeping. Why not? If you need to go to a meeting or get a project done, don't you block that time off your calendar? If you are planning to work out 3 times a week, don't you carve out time? As with any goal, we will not hit our mark all the time, but we wont hit anything if we do not set the goal, and create a plan to meet it.
Next time someone asks you how you are, challenge yourself to share your goals and successes of getting good sleep. Reinforce others who are on the same journey.