Drained?: How to sync your sleep & life

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Have you ever struggled to stay awake in your 9 a.m. class, and wondered why? Let’s say you slept for six hours—below the recommended number, but you might think it would be enough to keep you functioning until your afternoon emergency nap.

Not necessarily. How many hours you sleep matters, of course—a lot. But that’s not the only way sleep influences your functioning the next day (like being able to pick up where you left off in pre-calc, put in a half-decent performance at volleyball, and remember to wish your dad a happy birthday).

When you sleep may influence your academic performance even more than sleep duration does, research suggests. That’s because sleep isn’t just one experience affecting your body and brain; it’s a sequence of experiences that meet various physical, emotional, and intellectual needs. Combined, these stages are known as the sleep cycle. When you disrupt your sleep cycle, you’ll feel it, even if you’re getting the “right” total number of hours. Sleeping three hours at night and four in the afternoon, for example, is not equivalent to sleeping seven hours consecutively. (Also: The recommended number of hours for young adults is 8–9 ¼, according to the National Sleep Foundation.)

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Got sleep inertia?

We have all felt the pain of fragmented sleep after our night has been seriously interrupted. Our morning grogginess—also known as sleep inertia—is a liability. We cut ourselves shaving, we spill our coffee, we dump our adorable partner. Our memory, alertness, reaction time, and decision making are well below where we’d like them to be. Sleep inertia can last far longer than we might realize: two to four hours, according to researchers at Harvard Medical School. You’re likely to be less perceptive and attentive in class. You may struggle to understand why your male Spanish teacher will never be embarazada. (It’s because this means pregnant, not embarrassed.) You may be irritable and not much fun to be around.

How about social jet lag?

If your natural wake time is routinely out of sync with the time that society (e.g., your class schedule) tells you to get up, you are likely suffering from social jet lag. In a 2000 study in the Journal of American College Health, students with an irregular sleep pattern performed worse academically than their peers, even when they slept the same total number of hours.

“For college students, the worst impact of inadequate sleep is the hit to their memory and learning,” says Dr. Shelley Hershner, a sleep specialist and assistant professor of neurology, University of Michigan. In a 2014 national survey, more than half of college students reported significant daytime sleepiness, and two in three felt sleepiness hurt their academic performance (American College Health Association’s National College Health Assessment). Sleep deprivation and disruption is among the top three causes of poor academic performance, along with stress and anxiety (which are also associated with disrupted sleep).

In studies, irregular sleep patterns, later bedtimes, and later wake-up times are associated with lower GPAs. Some evidence suggests that memory formation may be prompted by deep sleep (the third stage) and then consolidated by Rapid Eye Movement (REM) sleep, helping to explain why we need those sequential stages. “If you disrupt the natural sleep cycle, you will pay for it, either through being tired, getting poor grades, or even depression,” says Dr. David Reitman, medical director of the student health center at American University, DC.

What does sleep disruption do to us? How to fix your sleep Do sleep apps help?

Sleep Cycle Graph

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3

A single sleep cycle lasts 1 ½–2 hours. It involves three stages of Non-Rapid Eye Movement (NREM) sleep—including deep sleep (Stage 3)—and one stage of rapid eye movement (REM) sleep, in which our brains are most active, according to the American Academy of Sleep Medicine.

  • Visually, Stage 1 (light sleep) and REM sleep occupy the same band of this chart, but they are very different processes.
  • In a typical night you should get four to six full sleep cycles.

Learn more about REM sleep

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