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I took a 6-hour nap the other day from noon to six pm and I woke up fine and refreshed. Of course, I was tired enough to guarantee that the nap would be a good one lol.
I took a 6-hour nap the other day from noon to six pm and I woke up fine and refreshed. Of course, I was tired enough to guarantee that the nap would be a good one lol.
That's SOME nap - it's most people's worth of night sleep.
I feel groggy after napping, too. Also, the most weird dreams seem to happen during naps. Even though naps feel blissful sometimes, I've almost started avoiding them as I don't feel good afterwards.
Been there, done that. Have you ever woke up in the middle of the night thinking it was morning and said oh s*** and jumped out of bed? You think you are late for work because you overslept. In all the confusion you look at a clock and calm down.LOL......
It's definitely for more than an hour, although I don't intend for them to be. I'm just so tired that I unconsciously turn off the alarms on my cell phone that are supposed to limit my nap to 30 minutes.
The only time I take naps is when I am very tired and haven't had much sleep. Or the afternoon after I've pulled an all-nighter for school. I know, bad bad bad.
I'm so glad I'm not the only one like this though! I was beginning to think I was a little strange lol.
There's your problem, you're sleeping long enough to go to Stage 4 sleep, which is deep sleep where your brain shuts down (well the cerebral cortex, your cerebrum keeps you breathing, digesting, etc.) to replenish the chemicals it needs to operate. A disoriented feeling waking out of Stage 4 is more common than not, that's probably what's happening. Try just power napping, 10 to 15 minutes at most. Longer, or if you're really tired, slams you down to Stage 4.
Wonder if there is some apnea there. During the night it might occur and you fall asleep without noticing. During the afternoon nap it amounts to a jolt and perhaps an alarm (brain things oh crap, need air, part of the fight or flight response.)
Occasionally, I'll take a nap in the afternoon. However, whenever I wake up in the evening, I find myself in this strange, urgent mood.
It's a mixture of depressed, disorientated, calm panic/anxiety, and a general sense of being lost and confused with my lost. I also feel like I missed out on something or I'm wasting my life away because I took a nap. A sense of urgency also encompasses me, although I'm not quite sure for what.
Am I the only one like this? I try to avoid naps because of the aftereffects. The feelings and moods that happen afterwards are very out of character for me, and usually go away the next day after a night's sleep.
No, I'm not depressed, suicidal, or experiencing any trauma, and no, I haven't dealt with any of that in the past.
You know what they say, those who nap are slacking off in life, and you know what happens to slackers? They get eaten by the langoliers!!!
Just kidding.
As long as it doesn't interfere with regular sleep and not excessive; listen to your body, take a nap.
Occasionally, I'll take a nap in the afternoon. However, whenever I wake up in the evening, I find myself in this strange, urgent mood.
It's a mixture of depressed, disorientated, calm panic/anxiety, and a general sense of being lost and confused with my lost. I also feel like I missed out on something or I'm wasting my life away because I took a nap. A sense of urgency also encompasses me, although I'm not quite sure for what.
Am I the only one like this? I try to avoid naps because of the aftereffects. The feelings and moods that happen afterwards are very out of character for me, and usually go away the next day after a night's sleep.
No, I'm not depressed, suicidal, or experiencing any trauma, and no, I haven't dealt with any of that in the past.
When you sleep your body manufactures Serotonin. This is a neurotransmitter which affects perception and mood. Most notably people who take medications that are Serotonin Re-uptake Inhibitors (SSRI's), such as Prozac and Zoloft, report many of the same feelings that you describe because they have more Serotonin in their body than they would otherwise.
Serotonin is also responsible for dream induction and often people who have an over abundance feel as though they are in a waking dream, or find that if they close their eyes they enter an unreal dream-like state that is difficult o understand and deal with.
If these feelings bother you, then the best advice would be simply not to take naps. But at least you know that these feelings are completely normal under the circumstances.
Something strange happened to me in the weekend sleep related. Woke up after about 4-5 hours sleep which obviously isn't enough.....and felt like a million dollars, far better than usual, had been sleeping a regular amount prior....... no idea why I felt that good on so little sleep.
Something strange happened to me in the weekend sleep related. Woke up after about 4-5 hours sleep which obviously isn't enough.....and felt like a million dollars, far better than usual, had been sleeping a regular amount prior....... no idea why I felt that good on so little sleep.
You really get that much sleep? I wish I got 5 hours on a regular basis.
Uusally get 8 hours per night, just found it strange I felt so good after 4-5.
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