The
nap is purported by many of my friends (admittedly, all over the age
of 50) to be one of life’s little pleasures. Their benefits escape
me, however. I’ve never been one to take naps. When at the age of
five I was in the hospital recovering from a broken leg, I remember
the nurses coming into the children’s ward (yes, most patients
recovered in wards back then; private and semi-private rooms, if they
had them, were a luxury my parents could not afford) every afternoon,
pulling the shades/blinds, turning off the lights for half an hour or
so and leaving us to our naps. I never napped, even then. I
considered them then, as I do now, to be a monumental waste of
precious time. So I would lie there, excruciatingly bored, waiting
and waiting and waiting for the nurses to return and bring back the
light.
Recovering
from my bout of cancer in 2003, I did sleep frequently during the
day, but I did not consider these periods to be naps, but more the
body’s need to quietly go about the business of repairing itself.
When having P.E.T. or C.A.T. scans during my subsequent follow up
visits to Mayo, part of the process involved being injected with a
radioactive dye, and lying as still as possible for an hour. They
don’t want you to read or watch TV or to have any distractions,
apparently to facilitate the circulation of the dye throughout the
body. They put you in a small curtained room and turn off the lights.
Nap time. Sometimes I did, sometimes I didn’t. But when I did, it
was reluctantly.
Occasionally
now, when I take a break from writing and play computer solitaire,
I’ll find my mind numbing to the point where I consider lying down
for a few minutes. This blog entry is, as a matter of fact, a
response to such an urge. But I find when I give in to it, I tend to
wake up feeling as though someone had spiked my grog…hmmm, I wonder
if that is where the word “groggy” comes from? (Digression,
anyone?) Anyway, I awake more tired than when I’d lain down, and
feeling strongly as though someone had slipped another day in there,
somehow.
I
love sleep. But sleep requires time to be fully appreciated. A nap is
an unwelcome teaser for the night to come. If I want to sleep, I want
to feel as though I’ve gotten my money’s worth.
A
friend in Los Angeles had a ritual. As soon as he got home from work
each night, he would lie down for 20 minutes…no more, no less…and
wake up feeling as chipper as a bluejay. I never could understand how
he could do that. Two of my Chicago friends schedule one or more naps
a day and seem to be perfectly fine with it. I chalk it up to just
one more thing in life that is beyond my ability to comprehend.
Certain
well-known historical figures substituted frequent naps for the need
to sleep more than a couple hours each night. Thomas Edison, I
believe, was one. Small wonder he would invent devices (the electric
light, the phonograph) that would tend to keep him awake.
For
those who take naps, I admit a certain degree of grudging admiration
for doing something I cannot understand, and curiosity as to why and
how naps become not only pleasurable but necessary. Maybe it’s a
form of addiction.
Time
for a cup of coffee.
Dorien's
blogs are posted by 10 a.m. Central time every Monday, Wednesday, and
Friday. Please take a moment to visit his website
(http://www.doriengrey.com)
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Circuits: a Life in Blogs (http://bit.ly/m8CSO1).
1 comment:
This got me thinking. I don't tend to nap unless I know I'm coming down with something or unless I'm already sick. The only time I'll force myself to sleep is when I'm on a plane and that typically ends in frustration. I figure if I'm going to be on a plane for 15 hours, the least I could is make as much of it go by unconsciously as I can. A laptop battery only lasts so long...
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