If you are a night-owl like me, you can spend a lifetime
forcing yourself to get up earlier than your body wants to. You will do that through
your school years, and, for most of us, through your working life. Even in
retirement, you might find a reason to get up early. In my case, two wonderful
grandkids show up at our kitchen door before 7 a.m. every weekday. It’s worth
getting up, but it’s never easy.
Theoretically, we can drop the kids at school and be back in
bed by 9 a.m. But by then it has taken so much effort to be awake and talking
that I can’t just pop back into bed. Lately, when I do go back for a nap, I’ll
plan on sleeping for an hour but find myself waking up three hours later. On
weekends I’ve been sleeping until 11:30 unless I set an alarm. I have blamed
this in part on my own biological rhythms and in part on the fact that daylight
hours are becoming shorter in our part of the world. I tried going to bed
earlier than usual, but I lay awake longer than if I’d stayed up..
The New York Times Magazine of October 20, 2013, reports what I’ve known for years: Scientific research
shows that each individual has a unique daily biological clock, or circadian
rhythm, and it’s genetic. (I’ve known this because 30-some years ago I worked
with a professor at the University
of Minnesota whose job
included promoting awareness of chronobiology research findings.).
In the Times
story, Till Roenneberg, a professor of chronobiology at Ludwig Maximilian
University in Munich and a leading expert in sleep studies,
groups people into three “chronotypes,” designated as early, intermediate, and
late. He and other researchers have found that late people—night owls, as my
mother called me—suffer the most from having their schedules interrupted. And
their schedules are interrupted often, because the world tends to favor early
start times.
“If you are forced to wake up earlier than your body
naturally would, you suffer from what Roenneberg calls ‘social jet lag,’” says
the magazine. Various studies around the world have linked this “jet lag” to
increased levels of weight gain, depression, and changes in white matter that
may make the brains of night-owl types less efficient.
I pause a moment to let this sink in, for those of us whose
brains have become less efficient.
The Times story reports
that being a person of the night is not just a bad habit, as some might
believe. It says in a study reported in the May issue of the journal Chronobiology, “researchers found that
late chronotypes tended to have activity in genes that contribute to later
sleep onset, offering further evidence that the urge to stay up late or to rise
early is not a lifestyle choice but resides in our DNA.”
Roenneberg has a suggestion and an observation.
His advice to late chronotypes: Get outside more, because
soaking up sunlight helps move most people, regardless of chronotype, toward an
earlier sleep time.
In addition, he has found that Daylight Saving Time disrupts
sleep for everyone, but especially for us late people. “Everybody sleeps better
when it ends.”
I hope he is right. I am celebrating the turning back of the
clocks (I wish they would just stay this way year-round). I joined Peter to sit in the sunny (if chilly)
garden for a bit this afternoon. The story didn’t mention it, but I suspect
exercise helps, too, so I’ll be practicing my tap dance routines more often.
I’m an owl in a world mostly scheduled for larks. You’d
think by now I’d be used to it, but you’d be wrong!
I found the lark-and-owl illustration on a blog by Mitch Hinz, where he wrote about his own efforts to sleep better.
I found the lark-and-owl illustration on a blog by Mitch Hinz, where he wrote about his own efforts to sleep better.