If you're drugged to the point of grogginess, why not sleep it off?
On the surface, yes, this seems to make sense. However, to begin with, I sleep today, I don't sleep tonight, and the problem is perpetuated. And if I don't keep to some vague semblance of an "awake during the day" schedule, I get nuts. Plus, though I am a writer who works from home, there are things (emails, phone calls, etc.) that demand of me consciousness during "working hours."
Sleep is the best part of life -
Not with my nightmares. I'd stop sleeping tomorrow, forever, given the opportunity.
My waking schedule shifted by 6 hours every day, but that was fine.
Re: Why get up?
Date: 2011-05-28 06:11 pm (UTC)If you're drugged to the point of grogginess, why not sleep it off?
On the surface, yes, this seems to make sense. However, to begin with, I sleep today, I don't sleep tonight, and the problem is perpetuated. And if I don't keep to some vague semblance of an "awake during the day" schedule, I get nuts. Plus, though I am a writer who works from home, there are things (emails, phone calls, etc.) that demand of me consciousness during "working hours."
Sleep is the best part of life -
Not with my nightmares. I'd stop sleeping tomorrow, forever, given the opportunity.
My waking schedule shifted by 6 hours every day, but that was fine.
My head would blow up. Really.