Short Work on Sleep #1 (Rough)

 In reality/in conclusion: I *technically* slept approximately 7 hours and 30 minutes. Because I normally stay awake for 16 hours (approximately). I woke up yesterday after sleeping for that EXACT SAME TIME “7 hours and 30 minutes”. But I went to sleep today after *only* staying awake for 10 HOURS. 


Obvious Conclusion: The less longer you stay awake. The less sleep you need, because you still have sleep invested from the previous day. **This is all in accordance if you have slept longer the previous day, and also of course. Stayed up longer the previous. Which is only makes sense if you slept longer. You were more tired, but also you had the opportunity to sleep longer. No stress, no activities planned. Sleep IS your activity, so it takes over to its fullest potential.


Theory: Sleeping is like a bank where you have an account, seemingly. But the money never goes away, because you keep sleeping (Sleep is the consist gaining and regaining of the money?). However, with sleeping; you always have the same amount of money. Let’s say $800 (because eight hours of sleep is basically the median sleep you need for us adults). 


Now you NEED to spend nearly EXACTLY that amount of money to succeed in life so “very little more or very little less than 8 hours of sleep”. 


You feel bad after sleeping too much because you spent too much of your “sleep money”, and you are suffering the consequences because (therefore) your body doesn’t have enough “sleep money” to take care of itself. It works sort of the same if you sleep too little. 


The interesting about sleep though is the “investments”, if you will; can be sneaky. If you do what I did “lots of sleep the day before, but going to sleep fairly earlier the following day than you did the previous day. You will *not* sleep that much. It’s true:


You can’t spend “sleep (money)” you don’t have. See the relation? And there ain’t no “sleep credit cards”; don’t even get me started. A “sleep credit card” for the Bank of Sleep would probably be doing a drug to stay awake. Perhaps it works in the same way? I’m not a doctor. But yeah, if you’re say “staying awake for extraordinarily hours at a time”, yeah. You’re gonna owe the Sleep Bank HUGE amounts of money, and eventually if you keep staying up for SO LONG…


they’ll sue you.

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