For Gregory McKee, getting a good
night’s sleep is as important as eating right and exercising regularly. If he
doesn’t get eight hours of shuteye, the founder and managing director of La
Jolla, California-based STS Capital Partners will have trouble functioning the
next day.
Seven or more hours' sleep a night
boosts the benefits to the heart of a healthy lifestyle, research suggests.
Two months ago, McKee took an
overnight flight across the country for a meeting. He barely slept. By
mid-afternoon he was disengaged and he kept leaving the room to get more coffee
and soda. He couldn’t make out a word of his sleep-deprived notes when
he
reviewed them later that night.
“They were useless,” said McKee,
whose international investment banking specialises in mergers, divestitures and
strategy.
On the flipside, Darren Witmer
can’t imagine sleeping for eight hours. He goes to bed at about 3:00 and wakes
up four hours later. The chief executive officer of Cary, North Carolina-based
business consultancy Reset My Business swears he’s perfectly fine the next day.
No drowsiness, no excessive coffee drinking, and no problem reading his notes
at the end of the day.
“It’s a little weird,” he
admitted. “My wife’s a physiologist and she’s been watching with intrigue.”
These people may be busy but
they’re not being as efficient as they should be. — Eric Olson
Exactly how much to sleep is a
question many busy professionals struggle with. Despite research studies
exalting the value of a full night’s sleep
ideally between seven and nine hours each night many people eschew a few hours of sleep in
favour of extra time to work, rather than taking that time from family and
personal interests.
And it’s hard to ignore images of
successful businesspeople like Martha Stewart and Donald Trump, who boast that they
sleep only three or four hours a night. The implication: big success can’t
really be achieved unless you give up sleep
and lots of it.
So is less sleep, or more, better
for your career?
Most people, no matter where they
live in the world, need about eight hours of sleep to perform at the best of
their abilities, said David Dinges, a professor of psychology at the University
of Pennsylvania and a leading sleep researcher in America. Less than 5% of the
world population are naturally short sleepers, meaning that their body clocks
simply operate on a shorter sleep cycle of four or five hours per night. Still,
many people sleep less on purpose and may feel fine the next day.
Hidden impacts
For most people, though, missing
out on a good night’s rest has an impact in the morning. Eric Olson, the
co-director of sleep medicine at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, says
that attention, dexterity and vigilance to details can suffer when people sleep
less than seven or eight hours for more than a day or two in a row. Too-short
sleepers may also have trouble remembering details and find themselves
susceptible to numerous health issues, including obesity and even premature
death.
What’s more, many short sleepers
use the extra awake time to work, but it isn’t always prime productivity time.
Witmer admits that his late night hours he often works between 21:00 and
2:00 aren’t as productive as when he
works between 8:00 and 17:00. “I’m not at my peak performance at 2 a.m.,” he
said. “But even 50% productivity is better than nothing.”
Still, many short-sleepers believe
the amount of time they spend working at something is the key to getting
ahead. So, is the fact that Donald Trump
sleeps three or four hours a night really behind his successes? Probably not,
Dinges said.
The Trumps of the world are often
more productive because they don’t have to worry about every day issues like
paying for education or saving for retirement, he said. High-powered executives
and other wealthy people also typically have teams of people taking care of
mundane life tasks like laundry, paying bills and shuttling children to
activities. That frees them up during the most productive hours of the day to
focus on the work that makes them successful.
Snacking on sleep
Even people who boast of never
missing a full night’s sleep or barely
needing any may be miscalculating
exactly how much rest they really get, according to Dinges. People who sleep
less often avoid exhaustion by making up some of those hours many sleep longer on the weekend, for
instance. Busy executives may rest on long plane rides or while being driven in
a car to a meeting.
“They snack on sleep,” Dinges
said.
Witmer sleeps for a nine-hour stretch
several times a month. Lawyer Richard Bobholz, another four-hour sleeper, often
takes 45-minute naps in the afternoon. “When I wake up I’m ready to go again,”
Bobholz said.
Research also shows that the
average typical sleeper overestimates the number of hours of they sleep. Dinges
says they’re likely in bed for closer to six-and-a-half hours, rather than the
eight they report.
Ultimately, getting eight hours of
sleep is ideal, mostly from the perspective of better health, Olson said. For
those who sleep far fewer hours, there may be a bit of foolery going on, he
said, because too little sleep even if you feel just fine the next day usually saps productivity.
“These people may be busy,” said
Olson about the four-hour sleeper, “but they’re not being as efficient as they
should be.”
Source: BBC
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