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While inducing drowsiness, alcohol impairs deep sleep, does it not? Everything I've read suggests that alcohol is the enemy of restorative (REM) sleep, which has also been my experience: The last few years I would sleep deeply and uninterrupted fewer than five times a year. Now, consuming no alcohol, I sleep deeply even through the four-hour expiry of my narcotics. There is a direct inverse correlation for me (and according to the literature, most people) between heavy alcohol usage and quality sleep. I have had a few lucid, alcohol-free intervals (sobriety as long as two years) over the past 20 years, and in each case I was rewarded with restorative sleep. Of course, I may be older and also losing sleep-capacity as many people begin to do in middle age; this, of course, is unrelated to booze.
I'm a big believer in a nighttime ritual (such as Barry describes) and also of investing in sleep's luxuries: a deep mattress pad, high-thread count cotton sheets, fancy natural fiber pj's, a good music source in my bedroom, and a repetitive schedule. I refuse to address troubling matters after dark, be they professional or personal. Girlfriends bridle at the idea that no, I'm not going to "work something out" at 9 p.m.
When I now put my head on the pillow sober, seemingly wide awake, with a book and my favorite classical station, invariably I am groggy by the third page. I never, sober, remain awake beyond the 20 minutes I program the radio to play before shutting down.
Pre-industrial peoples rarely slept through the night straight. They'd go down at 9 or so and wake in the early hours for a spell, then return to bed until the sun came up. It was called First Sleep and Second Sleep. People would even socialize in their nightclothes. Some have suggested that the eight-hour, uninterrupted sleeping schedule is a byproduct of industrialization, in-home and street lighting, and an unnatural conviction that we need to adapt our bodies to the requirements of 'productivity.'
_________________ Initiated TSM 11 August 2013
Grateful for Sinclair, Eskapa, this community, and the NAL.
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