Sleep more, perform better

JarnoV

JarnoV
Silver Member
[This is a cross-post from by blog. I don't know if it's considered impolite to pimp one's own blog here, but I thought that this topic was important enough to warrant a cross-post.]

These are the facts. One, your performance decreases the more sleep deprived you are. Two, your learning is hampered if you don't sleep well.

For those unaware of how sleep debt works, here's a short, simplified explanation. First, everyone has pretty much a fixed daily sleep need. This sleep need varies individually: some need only five hours of sleep per day, some people need nine, most fall somewhere in between. When you sleep more than your daily sleep need, your sleep debt is decreased and vice versa when you sleep less than your daily sleep need. The more sleep debt you have, the more tired you feel.

This tiredness is somewhat masked by circadian alerting and external stimuli. Circadian alerting is a biological process, which makes you more alert starting in the morning and starts to make you really drowsy in the evening. External stimuli are things like caffeine and states of mind like being excited. Below is a picture that graphs your sleep urge during different times of the day. (Think of "sleep urge" as the reverse of alerting.)

normalsleep.gif


Now, this system of sleep debt is automatic. Just like a thermostat controlling the temperature of a room, your brain just starts to make you more sleepy when you gain sleep debt and more alert when you decrease it. You can't consciously decide to sleep less. Eventually the sleep urge becomes so over-whelming that you can't fight it anymore. If you've ever seen those documents about people who have tried to stay awake for as long as possible, you know what I'm talking about. After a couple of days of being awake, they start to grow more and more tired. (Though in fact these people who stay awake for long periods start to develop microsleeps in which the they fall asleep for just couple of seconds every now and then. Typically they can't even notice these sleeps by themselves.) The research in sleep deprivation shows that this same happens even if you miss just half an hour sleep per day: it just takes a lot longer to become so sleep deprived that you start to fall asleep during the day.

The jury is still out whether this sleep debt system is in fact one-to-one between the amount of sleep that you've lost and the amount you sleep more later. That is, whether your daily sleep amount converges with your sleep need in the long run. The evidence suggest that this is the case. So you can't decide to sleep less, because your natural sleep urge just makes you sleep more later.

But for the serious student of pool, or any other discipline for that matter, the lesson isn't about whether or not you can sleep less. The serious student should make it a priority to sleep as much as possible.

Whether or not you can "cheat" the system by constantly sleeping less, the fact remains that your performance increases in all aspects when you constantly sleep as much as you can. Veteran sleep researcher William Dement describes this in his Google Personal Growth series talk. Dement shows graphs from studies in which Stanford athlete students are put to sleep extension programs and after couple of weeks of sleeping as much as they can, they start to perform better in all aspects of their discipline. They run faster, they shoot baskets more accurately, they jump longer and so on. It's pretty amazing if you think of it: these are people who aim to be professionals in their discipline and their performance increases just by sleeping more. They thought that they knew how good they were, but after a couple of weeks of extensive sleep, they performed better.

But there is even more to it.

Recent research also suggests that sufficient sleep is necessary for efficient learning. If you practice a fine motor task, like for example pocketing balls with a stick, you have to sleep during the next night or else the practice is completely forgotten. In fact, your fine-motor control is refined during the sleep. You learn during the sleep! The better you sleep at night, the better you learn. If you don't sleep next night after a practice, you don't learn anything. Matt Walker describes this line of research in his Fora.tv talk.

How do you make sure that you get enough sleep?

If you've taken seriously what I've said, you might be wondering whether or not you are sleeping enough. The short answer is that if you don't feel tired during day-time, you are getting enough sleep. If you do feel tired say one hour after waking up in the morning, you are probably sleep deprived. Note though that there is a dip in alertness in the afternoon, which you can see in the graph above. So even if you are sleeping enough, you might still experience afternoon drowsiness and this is just because there's a dip in circadian alerting. But all in all, the best indicator of sleeping enough is your day-time alertness.

If you are sleep deprived, however, the correction is simple: start sleeping more. The research has shown that you can't sleep too much, contrary to the popular belief. If you just sleep as much as you can, eventually your sleep debt decreases to zero and you start feeling less and less tired. (And you start perform better, as discussed earlier.) But you can't sleep away your whole sleep debt in one go. Even if you're extremely sleep deprived, eventually the circadian alerting kicks in and you wake up.

The best way to make sure that you get enough sleep in the long term is to set up a fixed time to go to sleep, say 10 p.m. in the evening and to sleep as long as you can in the morning. There's some flexibility to the exact time you can go to sleep, but not much, maybe an hour or so. This type of arrangement ensures that you are able to fall asleep predictably. If your sleep schedule is chaotic, you might not be able to fall asleep even if you're extremely sleep deprived. Yes, this means that you shouldn't be pulling those all-nighters at the pool hall.

In summary: if you want the best performance out of yourself, you should stick to a fixed sleep schedule and sleep as much as you can.

(You need to avoid alcohol too, because it decreases the quality of your sleep significantly.)
 
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What if your prostate is the size of a cantelope and you have get up to pee seven or eight times in the night? Not that I'm like that, you understand, I'm just asking for a friend. :wink:
 
If I could get home early enough to take a nap before I went out to play, When I was working, I would almost guarantee, I would win. I also discovered I have sleep apnea. It's a sleeping disorder that deprives you of the proper rest your body requires. If some of you out there feel tired all the time and snore rather heavily, I suggest you get checked out by your doctor. It's a very serious condition.

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http://tommcgonaglerightoncue.com
 
What if your prostate is the size of a cantelope and you have get up to pee seven or eight times in the night? Not that I'm like that, you understand, I'm just asking for a friend. :wink:

It sure is a problem, but since I'm not an expert in sleep disorders, I feel like I'm not qualified to give a medical advice. That said, I'd wager it's better to wake up that way than to have something like a sleep apnea. To wake up peeing at night cuts away night's sleep, but I'd guess the body could perhaps at least get the full cycle that is something like 60-90 minutes.

If you feel extremely tired during day-time, I'd definitely recommend seeing a doctor.
 
If I could get home early enough to take a nap before I went out to play, When I was working, I would almost guarantee, I would win. I also discovered I have sleep apnea. It's a sleeping disorder that deprives you of the proper rest your body requires. If some of you out there feel tired all the time and snore rather heavily, I suggest you get checked out by your doctor. It's a very serious condition.

Yep, and sleep apnea is one of the most under-diagnosed conditions. I don't know the exact numbers, but I remember that it's estimated that like 10-20% of the adult population have some type of sleep apnea. It just doesn't get diagnosed, because people think it's normal to be tired during the day.
 
And thanks everyone for the compliments. Being the attention whore that I am, I was first worried that no one read the article. ;-)
 
And thanks everyone for the compliments. Being the attention whore that I am, I was first worried that no one read the article. ;-)

I think the article is great. I know that for many of my working years, I've been operating with too little sleep. And it just gets worse when/if kids arrive...

Now if there was only a way to improve the quality of my sleep without cutting out alcohol...:grin:
 
I think the article is great. I know that for many of my working years, I've been operating with too little sleep. And it just gets worse when/if kids arrive...

Now if there was only a way to improve the quality of my sleep without cutting out alcohol...:grin:


You mean passing out is not the same thing as going to sleep? :grin:
 
JarnoV,

Your article makes sense to me. I am one of those guys who needs 9 hours a night. Always have. I've done with much less sleep but I can tell that my performance is diminished.

When I force myself to rest longer than 8 hours, I notice that my pool game improves and vice versa. It's nice to see this confirmed and that it's not all in my head. :D

Also, no alcohol... better rest and better game in the future days.

Thanks!

JoeyA
 
this may be a stretch

JarnoV,

Your article makes sense to me. I am one of those guys who needs 9 hours a night. Always have. I've done with much less sleep but I can tell that my performance is diminished.

When I force myself to rest longer than 8 hours, I notice that my pool game improves and vice versa. It's nice to see this confirmed and that it's not all in my head. :D

Also, no alcohol... better rest and better game in the future days.

Thanks!

JoeyA

I have played my best when I was VERY tired and got sorta calm almost falling asleep at the wheel feeling.....maybe I was just very relaxed.Also I have played awful....just awful with 12 hours sleep and a cup of coffee.
 
I have played my best when I was VERY tired and got sorta calm almost falling asleep at the wheel feeling.....maybe I was just very relaxed.Also I have played awful....just awful with 12 hours sleep and a cup of coffee.

Yeah, I guess it varies. But the second point you make is something that I didn't unfortunately talk about in the original post. That is, if you are sleep deprived to begin with and sleep for very long for certain night, like 12 hours, you are going to feel pretty bad and even sleepy during the day. When you start sleeping more, you are going to feel somewhat dozy and awkward for a while, but after you've slept good for maybe couple of weeks, you start to feel alert and good after waking up. So sleeping long for just one night isn't going to do it, you need a longer project for paying back your sleep debt.
 
"Navy nooners" a band-aid for the sleep deprived

And thanks everyone for the compliments. Being the attention whore that I am, I was first worried that no one read the article. ;-)

JarnoV:

Not only did I read the article (fantastic post, btw, just super!), but if this is a sampling of what's on your blog, I'd like to become a subscriber to it!

I'm unfortunately one of those statistics in your article, of the many sleep-debtors walking around, and until recently, not knowing he was in serious sleep debt. I work in Information Technologies (Cisco network architecture, security, UNIX system administration, et al.) and I'm constantly receiving calls, even at ungodly hours of the night. I have a "bunny slippers" analogy that I like to use, about getting woken up by a phone call at 3:00am, and having to shuffle up to my home office computer "in my bunny slippers" to login via VPN to the customer's network and diagnose/fix problems. "What's the uniform of the day for this customer? Bunny slippers and a robe." :D (For those not "getting" the humor, I don't actually have bunny slippers, of course. Nah, mine are Eeyore from Winnie the Pooh, little fake tail dragging behind them on the floor and all. :D Just kidding again.)

Back on topic, I'm constantly finding myself waking up after a micro-sleep, even at the computer. I'm onsite at a customer site almost every day of the week, and I have to practice the habit of "Navy nooners" -- a [presumably healthy] habit I learned from my 8-year stint in the U.S. Navy, when around-the-clock duty cycles made impossible a regular sleep "schedule." Rather, the person would catch sleep at every opportunity, including right after eating a quick meal, and using the rest of the lunch hour for a nice 30-minute "nooner" (i.e. sleep at noon). Those reading this may say, "how can you sleep for only 30 minutes?? Gosh, I'd be wrecked the rest of the day -- I'd be a walking zombie!" The answer is that you learn how to do this, and your body actually learns to love it. It doesn't take long for your body to adjust and to actually look forward to its "nooner." So, here's Sean (me), just after eating his lunch, shuffling out to his car in the parking lot, unlatches the seat back, pushes it a-l-l the way back (until the headrest is resting against the bottom seat cushion of the rear seat -- completely horizontal), drapes a black hand towel over his face, and INSTANTLY goes to sleep. And I've been doing this for so long, that I don't need an alarm clock. I wake up 30 minutes later, automatically. And I feel rested!

I even do this during the dead of the Northeastern U.S. winter months. I just make sure to wear my warm coat (a full-length dress Pea coat of a style that goes all the way to my knees, a scarf, a warm woolen cap, and I tuck my hands inside the pockets of my pea coat, maybe wear my issue leather gloves if it's that cold outside. The towel over my face (in a way that covers my entire face, but gives a little "hole" for my nostrils) actually gets very warm and cozy. Again, no alarm clock -- I automatically wake up 30 minutes later.

However, Navy nooners only go so far in helping pay back some of the sleep debt. Some readers on here (those that've been reading the CTE threads) know that I'm getting sick of my career in Information Technologies, precisely because of the crazy hours preventing me from doing many things I'd like to do, nevermind the sleep deprivation. I actually use these forums as a pleasant diversion from the day-to-day administrivia I find myself never being ahead of.

I hope to implement a change in my lifestyle soon, that opens up more time (but still pays the mortgage) and gives me the opportunity to settle into proper sleep patterns. Proper sleep DEFINITELY affects one's ability to play pool at his/her highest level!

I always look forward to reading about any suggestions/tips/alternatives that our knowledgeable readers can share. I'm all eyes and ears!

Warmest regards, and thanks for initiating such a great thread!
-Sean
 
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Yep, and sleep apnea is one of the most under-diagnosed conditions. I don't know the exact numbers, but I remember that it's estimated that like 10-20% of the adult population have some type of sleep apnea. It just doesn't get diagnosed, because people think it's normal to be tired during the day.

Can't mild sleep apnea can be controlled through proper diet and exercise? I thought the overweight smokers were more at risk for sleep disorders. (I have mild sleep apnea and the quality of my sleep is improving now that I quit smoking and started exercising)
 
Can't mild sleep apnea can be controlled through proper diet and exercise? I thought the overweight smokers were more at risk for sleep disorders. (I have mild sleep apnea and the quality of my sleep is improving now that I quit smoking and started exercising)

lol... kyle the thought of you doing sweatin' to the oldies is killing me! lol.
 
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