Society doesn’t actually care about science, because individuals only care if it reaffirms their pre-existing beliefs or makes them filthy rich. There are so many things we do that are contrary to well-established science.
This attitude is maddening. I am diagnosed with delayed sleep phase syndrome that will turn into a non 24 hour rhythm if I let it. I’ve worked with sleep doctors all over the country, most recently Duke.
I’m lucky that my work lets me start at 11am, I don’t get enough sleep those days but better than it could be.
Unfortunately I’m on call every other week, so forcing my clock to reset isn’t an option. It takes me 6 to 10 weeks to get to societies ideal sleep schedule, and a single night of interrupted sleep to undo all that work
The weeks I’m not on call are my weeks with my daughter, who has to be at school at 730 and there’s no bus for her to ride.
Either week, my schedule is fucked and I’m in a haze all the time. Helpfully anyone who finds out about it just tells me to excercise more (makes no difference, ive done a lot of testing and exclusion), stop caffeine (tried it), stop using screens of any kind after work (been there), or any other thing that they think I am doing wrong and causing the problem.
I did not expect to rant that much… I completely agree, science means nothing in the face of feelings and preconceived notions.
Your rant is welcome. I also have sleep issues. It can become highly debilitating. Before the medications that didn’t work, I went through every painstaking recommendation I was given - months-long sleep logs, more exercise, pristine bedroom hygiene, forcing “regular” hours, no artificial lights (including screens) 2 hours before bed, and so on - and none of those worked either.
At one point I had doctors telling me to try exercising less. And lo and behold, that one helped a tiny bit - because I had only been adding physical exhaustion on top of my pre-existing issues.
I feel ya. I’ve got the same thing. Luckily I’m still young and don’t have kids so I can at least adjust my schedule consistently, but man it sucks having to get up at 6 am on the weekends.
The real frustrating bit is that I could totally get up 2 hours later if only I could WFH consistently. But corporate doesn’t like remote work so I have to go into the office at least 2 days a week to sit at a computer all day and program.
Wonderful world we live in
Society doesn’t actually care about science, because individuals only care if it reaffirms their pre-existing beliefs or makes them filthy rich. There are so many things we do that are contrary to well-established science.
This attitude is maddening. I am diagnosed with delayed sleep phase syndrome that will turn into a non 24 hour rhythm if I let it. I’ve worked with sleep doctors all over the country, most recently Duke.
I’m lucky that my work lets me start at 11am, I don’t get enough sleep those days but better than it could be.
Unfortunately I’m on call every other week, so forcing my clock to reset isn’t an option. It takes me 6 to 10 weeks to get to societies ideal sleep schedule, and a single night of interrupted sleep to undo all that work
The weeks I’m not on call are my weeks with my daughter, who has to be at school at 730 and there’s no bus for her to ride.
Either week, my schedule is fucked and I’m in a haze all the time. Helpfully anyone who finds out about it just tells me to excercise more (makes no difference, ive done a lot of testing and exclusion), stop caffeine (tried it), stop using screens of any kind after work (been there), or any other thing that they think I am doing wrong and causing the problem.
I did not expect to rant that much… I completely agree, science means nothing in the face of feelings and preconceived notions.
Your rant is welcome. I also have sleep issues. It can become highly debilitating. Before the medications that didn’t work, I went through every painstaking recommendation I was given - months-long sleep logs, more exercise, pristine bedroom hygiene, forcing “regular” hours, no artificial lights (including screens) 2 hours before bed, and so on - and none of those worked either.
At one point I had doctors telling me to try exercising less. And lo and behold, that one helped a tiny bit - because I had only been adding physical exhaustion on top of my pre-existing issues.
I feel ya. I’ve got the same thing. Luckily I’m still young and don’t have kids so I can at least adjust my schedule consistently, but man it sucks having to get up at 6 am on the weekends. The real frustrating bit is that I could totally get up 2 hours later if only I could WFH consistently. But corporate doesn’t like remote work so I have to go into the office at least 2 days a week to sit at a computer all day and program. Wonderful world we live in
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