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	<title>Tom Holowka . com &#187; Productivity</title>
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	<description>Health for a Conscious World</description>
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		<title>The Fallacy of Working Smarter</title>
		<link>http://tomholowka.com/blog/the-fallacy-of-working-smarter/</link>
		<comments>http://tomholowka.com/blog/the-fallacy-of-working-smarter/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 05 Jan 2010 23:24:24 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Tom Holowka</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Productivity]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://tomholowka.com/?p=342</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Have you ever heard someone say &#8220;work smarter, not harder.&#8221; That sounds pretty good right? Seems to make sense, but as a statement it&#8217;s incredibly overrated. 
Work smarter not harder is such a misleading phrase because it makes you think that you can get by on smarts alone and you don&#8217;t have to work. The [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Have you ever heard someone say &#8220;work smarter, not harder.&#8221; That sounds pretty good right? Seems to make sense, but as a statement it&#8217;s incredibly overrated. </p>
<p>Work smarter not harder is such a misleading phrase because <strong>it makes you think that you can get by on smarts alone and you don&#8217;t have to work.</strong> The emphasis is the &#8220;smarter&#8221; part, not the work part, but the work part way more important than the smarter part. </p>
<p>You can&#8217;t work smarter if you&#8217;ve never started working in the first place.</p>
<p>Chances are you&#8217;re very smart (or at least you think you are), so being smart doesn&#8217;t help. Working helps.</p>
<p>If you&#8217;re overweight for example and haven&#8217;t exercised in three years, working smarter just means working.  </p>
<p>You have to learn to work, before you work smarter.  </p>
<p>I find that this shows most in planning. <strong>You can create the smartest goddamn plan in the world, but if you don&#8217;t follow it, it means nothing.</strong> Do you not follow the plan because you&#8217;re not smart? Maybe. It&#8217;s possible, but it&#8217;s more likely you don&#8217;t follow it because you know it&#8217;s going to be HARD.</p>
<p>Being smart is overrated, while working your ass off is extremely underrated.</p>
<p><strong>Work smarter not harder is so appealing because most of us (me included) are allergic to hard work. It&#8217;s very comforting to be told that you don&#8217;t have to work hard in order to be successful or achieve a goal.<br />
</strong><br />
<em>It&#8217;s also bullshit. </em></p>
<p>Sometimes working smarter, just means working.</p>
<ul>
Are you 100lbs overweight? Can you lose all that weght just by being smarter?  </p>
<p>Do you waste mountains of time on aimlessly surfing the internet?  Is being smarter going to help you stop? </p>
<p>Are you addicted to drinking or smoking? Does being smarter help you stop?
</ul>
<p>Conscious effort is really the key, aka Hard Work.</p>
<p>So here&#8217;s my suggestion, next time you hear &#8220;work smarter not harder&#8221; focus on the WORK not the smarts.</p>
<p><em>Please leave a comment below and share your thoughts!</em> <img src='http://tomholowka.com/wp-includes/images/smilies/icon_smile.gif' alt=':)' class='wp-smiley' /> </p>
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		<title>Polyphasic Sleep Days 4 and 5</title>
		<link>http://tomholowka.com/blog/polyphasic-sleep-days-4-and-5/</link>
		<comments>http://tomholowka.com/blog/polyphasic-sleep-days-4-and-5/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 09 Nov 2009 23:25:01 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Tom Holowka</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[30 Day Trials]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Personal Growth]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Productivity]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://tomholowka.com/?p=305</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Friday was the first day I was able to significantly ratchet down my total sleep. I was under four hours for the day and feeling pretty good and that continued into Saturday.
Saturday
Saturday was the best day I&#8217;ve had so far with a total of seven 30 minute naps.
Saturday Sleep
3am-3:30am
7am-7:30am
9:30am-10am
11:10am-11:40am
3pm-3:30pm
7pm-7:30pm
11pm-11:30pm
Saturday Sleep Total 3h 30m
I added an [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Friday was the first day I was able to significantly ratchet down my total sleep. I was under four hours for the day and feeling pretty good and that continued into Saturday.</p>
<h3>Saturday</h3>
<p>Saturday was the best day I&#8217;ve had so far with a total of seven 30 minute naps.</p>
<p><strong>Saturday Sleep</strong></p>
<p>3am-3:30am<br />
7am-7:30am<br />
9:30am-10am<br />
11:10am-11:40am<br />
3pm-3:30pm<br />
7pm-7:30pm<br />
11pm-11:30pm</p>
<p><strong>Saturday Sleep Total 3h 30m</strong></p>
<p>I added an extra nap in between my 7am and 11am naps because I was exhausted. From what I&#8217;ve read taking additional naps in the adaptation phase might help you to adapt quicker. Sleeping an extra planned nap is better than stretching too far and dosing off for a whole afternoon. It&#8217;s not like you&#8217;re blowing off any progress either. If you&#8217;re going from eight hours down to less than four, the extra half hour makes little difference.</p>
<p>I wish the tiredness had set in a different interval though. I&#8217;d rather take the extra nap during the night time so I&#8217;m not missing out on daytime hours. Maybe I can purposely schedule an extra nap for future days at 5am during this adaptation phase, so I can sleep more at night when the rest of the world is sleeping and not during the day. </p>
<p>After today I was feeling like I was on my way to being polyphasic.</p>
<h3>Sunday</h3>
<p>Then Sunday morning came and my doubts crept back in. After my first successful day where I had no oversleeping I had my 2nd big failure. On my Saturday 3am nap I forgot to set my alarm. I set it for 3:30am, but I didn&#8217;t have the correct day selected. I woke up at around 8am really frustrated. I can remember thinking when I first opened my eyes &#8220;sunlight, huh?&#8221; </p>
<p>I&#8217;m not treating this as a big deal at all. Just continuing forward.<br />
<strong><br />
Sunday Sleep</strong></p>
<p>3a-8a oversleep <img src='http://tomholowka.com/wp-includes/images/smilies/icon_sad.gif' alt=':(' class='wp-smiley' /><br />
1p-1:30p<br />
7p-7:30p<br />
11p-11:30p</p>
<p><strong>Sunday Sleep Total 6h 30min</strong></p>
<p>I decided to skip a nap and move another one around because I had already messed up in the AM. I thought skipping one would help me get back on track quicker. </p>
<h3>Discipline</h3>
<p>One thing keeping me positive is that I&#8217;m not just giving up and crawling into bed. I went to bed at the correct time both times I overslept. I basically messed up because I didn&#8217;t know how to set a proper alarm.<br />
It&#8217;s not a lack of discipline that&#8217;s causing my failure but instead a lack of mindfulness. I set my cell-phone alarm so all the days are selected now so that shouldn&#8217;t be a problem anymore. Having less details to think about while sleep deprived is probably better anyway. </p>
<p>From most of what I read on polyphasic sleep so far the adaptation period is the most difficult part. The more you oversleep and get off schedule the longer it takes to achieve adaptation. I&#8217;m not doing myself any favors by oversleeping, but I&#8217;m not discouraged at all. I&#8217;m going to keep trying until I get this down. </p>
<h3>Benefits</h3>
<p>I&#8217;m not fully adapted and still having some issues, but I&#8217;m still noticing some benefits. I&#8217;m enjoying the extra awake time. Although I haven&#8217;t been fully polyphasic and sleeping 3 hours a day I have been sleeping less hours total. I&#8217;ve been spending that extra time on writing. That&#8217;s been fun.</p>
<p>Since I started polyphasic sleep my mental chatter has turned waaay down. I feel like I&#8217;m being more present and focused on what I&#8217;m actually doing instead of constantly thinking and over-thinking. This happened when I first ate all raw foods too. My mental chatter going away helped me sleep better and to focus easier. I was in college at the time and remember feeling extra focused those first couple weeks raw. I wasn&#8217;t having any trouble falling asleep at all.</p>
<p>Falling asleep right away has been great too because before I started this I was having a lot of trouble falling asleep. That&#8217;s why I called my last post <a href="http://tomholowka.com/blog/insomnia-induced-polyphasic-sleep-trial/">Insomnia Induced Polyphasic Sleep Trial</a>. I wouldn&#8217;t be doing this if I hadn&#8217;t had so much trouble sleeping before.  </p>
<p>Look for another update tomorrow.</p>
<p><em>Please leave a comment below and share your thoughts!</em> <img src='http://tomholowka.com/wp-includes/images/smilies/icon_smile.gif' alt=':)' class='wp-smiley' /><br />
____________________________________________________________<br />
<a href="http://tomholowka.com/blog/insomnia-induced-polyphasic-sleep-trial/"><br />
Polyphasic Sleep Trial Update 1</a></p>
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		</item>
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		<title>Insomnia Induced Polyphasic Sleep Trial</title>
		<link>http://tomholowka.com/blog/insomnia-induced-polyphasic-sleep-trial/</link>
		<comments>http://tomholowka.com/blog/insomnia-induced-polyphasic-sleep-trial/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 07 Nov 2009 15:30:22 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Tom Holowka</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[30 Day Trials]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Health]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Personal Growth]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Productivity]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://tomholowka.com/?p=278</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[This post details how I randomly started polyphasic sleeping. Polyphasic sleeping is sleeping at short intervals throughout the entire 24 hour day as opposed to sleeping all in one big chunk at night.
Read Time: 11 Minutes
Bold Parts Only: 2 Minutes
On Tuesday night I had a lot of trouble sleeping. I got into bed, and I [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>This post details how I randomly started polyphasic sleeping. Polyphasic sleeping is sleeping at short intervals throughout the entire 24 hour day as opposed to sleeping all in one big chunk at night.</em></p>
<p>Read Time: 11 Minutes<br />
<strong>Bold </strong>Parts Only: 2 Minutes</p>
<p>On Tuesday night I had a lot of trouble sleeping. I got into bed, and I laid awake for about 2.5 hours or so trying to get comfortable and clear my thoughts so I could get some rest, but I wasn&#8217;t really tired. I took my phone off my night stand and started reading some articles on the internet while in bed. After reading a few and still not feeling tired I got up and went on my computer. I stayed up until 5am or so reading articles, and watching youtube videos. I ended up sleeping from about 5am to 10am. I woke up and went about my day deciding I would try to stay awake so I could normalize my schedule and not be up all night again. <strong>What followed was the most massive failure to be normal in the history of humanity. </strong></p>
<h3>Tuesday Night  / Wednesday Morning</h3>
<p>I stayed up all night again not being able to fall asleep. This time I was up until about 6:30am. I slept until about 11am still not very much sleep for me, but the peculiar thing is that I wasn&#8217;t feeling exhausted and needing to get more sleep.<strong> I was feeling a little tired but I didn&#8217;t have this overwhelming compulsion to dart into bed like I typically do when I&#8217;m tired. This is the moment I considered giving polyphasic a serious go. </strong>What happened to being normal? I took a 30 minute nap later that day around 3pm and still felt pretty good. I took another one at around 11:00pm and still felt alright. </p>
<p>A big mystery for me is wondering why I became an insomniac all of a sudden. I have no idea why I had so much trouble falling asleep on Tuesday and Wednesday nights.</p>
<h3>Thursday</h3>
<p>I had penciled in another nap for 3am to 3:30am. I set my wristwatch countdown timer for 30 minutes and an internet alarm for 31 minutes to wake me up. I woke up at 7:22am, almost 4.5 hours later. I was a little miffed when I woke up because I didn&#8217;t really get why I had slept that long, but still I wasn&#8217;t feeling that exhausted feeling. I was feeling relatively ok. I realized later that windows on my PC had installed an automatic update and restarted itself during the time period that I set the internet timer. The wristwatch probably just wasn&#8217;t loud enough to wake me up. So anyway I overslept, but wasn&#8217;t discouraged. I finished out the rest of the day according to schedule.</p>
<h3>Friday</h3>
<p>Despite the previous day&#8217;s failure I decided just to keep plugging along. Friday morning I overslept again on my planned nap for 11:00a &#8211; 11:30a. I woke up and it was 12:16p. This one was a little funny because I remembered waking up at 11:30a when my cell phone alarm went off. I can remember standing next to the desk looking at my cell phone. I have no idea how I got in bed and started sleeping after that, but it was only another 45 minutes. </p>
<p><strong>The rest of Friday went according to schedule and I slept a total of 3 hours and 45 minutes on Friday. </strong></p>
<p><strong>Here are my sleep totals for the week so far. Wednesday afternoon was when I decided that I was going to give polyphasic a try.</strong></p>
<p><strong>Tuesday:</strong> 5.5 Hours<br />
<strong>Wednesday:</strong> 5.5 hours<br />
<strong>Thursday:</strong> 6.5 Hours<br />
<strong>Friday:</strong> 3.75 hours </p>
<p><strong>Over four days I would normally get between 32 and 36 hours of sleep. Over the past four days I&#8217;ve gotten 21:45.</strong> I&#8217;m still functioning at a pretty high level despite the missing sleep hours. I exercised yesterday, got 2.5 hours of writing and editing in. I had a couple periods where I felt like I was just spacing too though. When I woke from my morning nap and my 2nd nap I felt like a total zombie just trying to keep my eyes open. My energy was pretty consistent for the rest of the day after those two struggling incidents.</p>
<h3>Outlook</h3>
<p><strong>From what I&#8217;ve read from other people&#8217;s accounts of polyphasic sleep there&#8217;s an adaptation period where your body has to get used to the new pattern.</strong> This period is said to be the toughest part and if you can make it through the 1st week your success rate improves dramatically. Once I get passed that initial period I&#8217;m expecting the spacing out zombie like feelings to go away.</p>
<p><strong>The structure I&#8217;m using is the 6&#215;30 nap strategy where I take six 30 minute naps spaced evenly throughout the day.</strong> I&#8217;m allowing leeway and not being super strict, but I&#8217;m also not trying to go too long without skipping a nap. Right now I&#8217;m aiming for my naps at 3am, 7am, 11am, 3pm, 7pm and 11pm. Isn&#8217;t that cool how it works out like that? I&#8217;ll just sleep on the 3&#8217;s 7s and 11&#8217;s.</p>
<p>Saturday will be interesting because Friday was really the first day that I had this working. Under 4 hours of sleep is new territory for me. I feel okay though. I&#8217;m feeling like I want to try to get the nap schedule down pat and not have any slip ups like I did yesterday, when for whatever reason I went back to sleep once. I have no problem with adding an extra nap in there somewhere if I&#8217;m feeling tired in between a nap. I don&#8217;t have a general feeling of tiredness or lethargy or anything like that. Tiredness  seems to come and go. I was by far most tired yesterday after I woke up from the extra unscheduled 45 min nap I took. Good thing I had to take the garbage out and do the dishes and not do anything where I had to think too hard because I was in zombie mode. Zombie Tom subsided after I was finished with the dishes. </p>
<h3>Previous Sleep Experimentation</h3>
<p>Polyphasic sleep is something I&#8217;ve always wanted to try ever since learning about it in 2006. It always seemed to me like it was odd that humans needed to sleep as long as we do. I thought you could game the system and sleep less. Resting for 9 hours seems like too big a percentage of total time spent alive.  If you average 8 hours of sleep per day that&#8217;s 33% of your life sleeping. It just seems like a lot. Since your time in the physical world is limited it makes sense to me that you would want to spend as much time interacting with the physical world as possible. </p>
<p>I ended up giving polyphasic a try once and that&#8217;s all it was a TRY.<strong> I failed pretty miserably and just wrote off polyphasic sleep as prolonged long term sleep deprivation.</strong> After this I did try biphasic sleeping with moderate success in the summer of 2006. I stopped that because my schedule never seemed consistent enough to allow a 90 minute nap somewhere in the middle of the day with any regularity like biphasic required. That was really the end of my sleep experimentation.</p>
<p>Most recently I&#8217;ve just been letting myself sleep as long as I need to. Going to bed and then just letting myself wake up naturally whenever woke. Sometimes I&#8217;d sleep 7.5 hours. Sometimes 8 or sometimes 9 or 10. Usually not more or less than that. </p>
<h3>Interesting Naps so Far</h3>
<p>One of the odd things that happens to me when I go to take a nap is lying down and not feeling like sleeping at all, even if I&#8217;m feeling really tired before nap time. I can recall being conscious almost the whole time lying down.  My alarm goes off and I&#8217;m surprised that I wasn&#8217;t able to fall asleep and then I get up. Only that I&#8217;m refreshed. I get up feeling rested and ready to tackle another few hours before my next nap even though I feel like I haven&#8217;t slept at all. This has happened about three times over the past couple days. I&#8217;m lying down, aware, not really sure if I&#8217;m sleeping because I&#8217;m able to direct my thoughts and even consciously move my body, yet I don&#8217;t think  I&#8217;m awake. Sounds weird right? My eyes do this rapid fluttering almost like a twitching during this. Is that what REM sleep refers to? I know REM stands for rapid eye movement, and I could feel my closed eyes moving rapidly. I guess maybe I should study a little more about sleep and see what I can find on that.</p>
<p>From what I understand you can do polyphasic sleep because the middle stages of the sleep cycle aren&#8217;t as important as the first and last cycles. When you sleep deprive yourself you condition, or possibly recondition yourself to enter the last and most important stage (REM Stage) quickly. I say possibly recondition because I&#8217;ve seen evidence that newborns are not monophasic sleepers (<strong>Edit:</strong> although babies also sleep 18 hours a day so maybe that&#8217;s a moot point). I don&#8217;t know if you would consider them polyphasic or biphasic though. </p>
<h3>Why Am I Doing This?</h3>
<p>Don&#8217;t take the above in any way as scientific because I&#8217;m really not sure what I&#8217;m talking about here. I&#8217;ve read others accounts on polyphasic sleep and I&#8217;m just going by them. Since I&#8217;ve had some extra time lately I spent about 2 hours the other night reading all of <a href="http://www.stevepavlina.com/blog/2005/10/polyphasic-sleep/">Steve Pavlina&#8217;s Polyphasic sleep logs</a>. They&#8217;re the most extensive posts I&#8217;ve seen from someone who seems to have gotten this to work long term. Steve did polyphasic sleep for about 5.5 months in 2005 and 2006. I Also too a look at <a href="http://www.puredoxyk.com/index.php/polyphasic-sleep-portal/">Puredoxyk </a>who has lots of info too. She&#8217;s been polyphasic for longer than Steve, although she practices a different type of polyphasic that&#8217;s different from what I&#8217;m doing right now. I&#8217;m not seeking to make this more scientific. I&#8217;m not really interested in the scientific knowledge behind it.</p>
<p><strong>The personal experiential questions are what I&#8217;m interested in answering.</strong> The science doesn&#8217;t really matter to me. <strong>I just want to see if and how this works from the inside out.</strong> Others appeared to have gotten it to work, but there&#8217;s not many of those claims out there, and it&#8217;s tough to know what to believe on the internet sometimes. I imagine that if I get this working and am regular with the polyphasic schedule I might become more interested in the why and how it works. <strong>Right now though I&#8217;m just interested in the: Does it work?</strong></p>
<p>I&#8217;m interested in getting it to work and seeing how I feel when I&#8217;m doing it. I can read accounts of what others say about polyphasic sleep, but there&#8217;s almost something phony about that, like I&#8217;m not really learning enough about it by just reading about it. <strong>I have too many questions that could only be answered from an experiential standpoint.</strong> Like can I really survive and not feel tired on 3 hours of sleep per day? How does this tie in with athletics? Will my recovery be slower? On a hard training day will more naps be required to keep awake and alert? How will this affect my productivity? I&#8217;ll have more time to do work but will the quality of my output be the same? Is polyphasic sleep just a quantity/quality tradeoff? Like am I just trading a few hours of sleep to have some lower quality hours in the day? Even if it is working and feels like I&#8217;m doing no harm, what is the long term affect on health?</p>
<h3>Don&#8217;t Believe it&#8217;s Possible?</h3>
<p>If you&#8217;re skeptical of this I can understand. <strong>I&#8217;m a little skeptical too, and I&#8217;m doing it.</strong> It&#8217;s like wow if this works why doesn&#8217;t everybody do this? And why does nobody really know about this? </p>
<p>I felt a similar way when I started eating all raw food for the first time in November 2007. When I started my stomach did not feel good at all. I was extremely bloated for the first seven to ten days. On the first day though I experienced a very high degree of focus. There was no other external event that would have explained that and I heard other accounts of people saying the same thing. It just felt like a fog had been lifted. Like it had been a perpetually cloudy day in my brain and all of a sudden the clouds opened up and the sun shined through for the first time. This caused me to stick with it initially even though physically I wasn&#8217;t feeling so great with the stomach bloating. Eventually that subsided and I felt better than ever. This is comparable to the adaptation phase of polyphasic sleep. </p>
<p>The fog lifting is analogous to the extra time I&#8217;m gaining. Even though I&#8217;m having my zombie episodes, I&#8217;m enjoying the benefits of having more awake time. Just like how I enjoyed the increased mental clarity eating raw food. I have to deal with feeling like a zombie at times, but in a week or so hopefully I&#8217;ll adjust and won&#8217;t be feeling that way anymore. </p>
<p>It would have been easy to write off these accounts without ever trying it and just call somebody crazy because they do something that isn&#8217;t normal. <strong>When you try it yourself though it&#8217;s much more difficult to deny your own experience.</strong></p>
<p>It&#8217;s 2:40am Saturday morning right now as I&#8217;m working on this post and I&#8217;ve spent a total of about two hours writing today already and the day is only about 3 hours old. That makes me feel really good! It&#8217;s like wow I can focus all this extra time into my goals and that prospect is really exciting. <strong>If I slept only 3-3.5 hours per day over the course of year that would lead to me to 1825-1642.5 extra hours of awake time per year versus someone averaging eight hours of sleep per day. That&#8217;s like living an 76 more days per year than the average monophaser!! </strong> </p>
<p>I&#8217;ll continue to update on how this is going over the next few days so check back when you can.</p>
<p><em>I&#8217;d really like to know your opinions on this. I want to encourage you to ask any questions you have on what I&#8217;m doing. You can do this by leaving a comment or sending an email to Tom at TomHolowka dot Com.</em> <img src='http://tomholowka.com/wp-includes/images/smilies/icon_smile.gif' alt=':)' class='wp-smiley' /><br />
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