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GliderGuider

(21,088 posts)
4. On the other hand: Your Ancestors Didn’t Sleep Like You
Sun May 1, 2016, 08:41 PM
May 2016
Your Ancestors Didn’t Sleep Like You

Ok, maybe your grandparents probably slept like you. And your great, great-grandparents. But once you go back before the 1800s, sleep starts to look a lot different. Your ancestors slept in a way that modern sleepers would find bizarre – they slept twice. And so can you.

The existence of our sleeping twice per night was first uncovered by Roger Ekirch, professor of History at Virginia Tech. His research found that we didn’t always sleep in one eight hour chunk. We used to sleep in two shorter periods, over a longer range of night. This range was about 12 hours long, and began with a sleep of three to four hours, wakefulness of two to three hours, then sleep again until morning.

References are scattered throughout literature, court documents, personal papers, and the ephemera of the past. What is surprising is not that people slept in two sessions, but that the concept was so incredibly common. Two-piece sleeping was the standard, accepted way to sleep. “It’s not just the number of references – it is the way they refer to it, as if it was common knowledge,” Ekirch says.

An English doctor wrote, for example, that the ideal time for study and contemplation was between “first sleep” and “second sleep.” Chaucer tells of a character in the Canterbury Tales that goes to bed following her “firste sleep.” And, explaining the reason why working class conceived more children, a doctor from the 1500s reported that they typically had sex after their first sleep.

I wonder how much the change in sleeping patterns had to do with the Industrial Revolution, and the rise of regimented factory hours?

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This message was self-deleted by its author Skittles May 2016 #1
Please inform my dogs and cats that my continued good health tularetom May 2016 #2
5am is rising time 1939 May 2016 #5
Yep crack of dawn, a bird or ten chirping around 5 and the cats let us know get out of bed!! Person 2713 May 2016 #13
Ha hahahahaha malaise May 2016 #7
My dogs line up beside my bed at 4 am leftyladyfrommo May 2016 #21
I'd say that beats jumping on a high window sill and then on your back with a 20-point landing eridani May 2016 #22
Yes. Cats are just as demanding. leftyladyfrommo May 2016 #24
Lol our cats are wenches JesterCS May 2016 #30
Make sure you do not have any led's or anything that puts out a blue to white color. Red ok. LiberalArkie May 2016 #3
Yep there are so many lights on our technology malaise May 2016 #9
I never thought about it but I changed out my old alarm clock (red LEDS) to a new fancy one with LiberalArkie May 2016 #11
I had to start turning off my computer JesterCS May 2016 #31
I got better sleep once I started using a sleep mask. nilram May 2016 #12
On the other hand: Your Ancestors Didn’t Sleep Like You GliderGuider May 2016 #4
I've also read of the "second sleep" in accounts of Colonial times annabanana May 2016 #6
Interesting malaise May 2016 #8
I have a friend that sleeps like that. Thanks for the link. She goes to sleep very early as mentione Person 2713 May 2016 #14
electric lights keep us up in the evening now. Viva_La_Revolution May 2016 #19
This is exactly my sleep pattern... Cornus May 2016 #28
It's opposite with me. HeiressofBickworth May 2016 #10
Exactly! Marie Marie May 2016 #17
I am the same way. nt Mojorabbit May 2016 #18
Interesting. Thnx. zentrum May 2016 #15
DU Seniors remember your Canadian Rhythms are critical ashling May 2016 #16
>sigh< This nightowl is doomed. Hekate May 2016 #20
Yah think malaise May 2016 #23
I will be 71 in June. bemildred May 2016 #25
So we can rewind the clock before it stops. Agnosticsherbet May 2016 #26
LOL malaise May 2016 #27
okay, stay with me here... Javaman May 2016 #29
I could never stay up 24 hours a day malaise May 2016 #32
I have a friend that hates sleeping... Javaman May 2016 #33
Love the joke malaise May 2016 #34
I'm usually up by 5, take a nap around 1 PM, in bed by 10. hobbit709 May 2016 #35
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