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Sleep And The 14-Hour Employee

In the last few companies I worked with before becoming a full-time content maven, we knew and heard about colleagues who work over 12-hour days on a regular basis. I’ve put in a couple of long hours over my career, but never on a daily basis. Based on experience, it doesn’t make sense why companies encourage and reward employees working long hours.

And it’s a common problem in the IT field where computers and systems must run 24/7 and tasks done after hours when the fewest number of people are signed on the network.

With each passing hour after the tenth hour, I became less effective. What took me two hours to do during overtime would take me only 20 minutes to do when I’m fresh and well-rested. When I two hours less sleep than usual, I become sluggish for the entire and tend to procrastinate (and I’m not a procrastinator by nature). Things I remembered easily slipped my mind five minutes after thinking about them.

I talked to a client, a vice president, a couple of nights ago. He was about to go to sleep and we started chatting about sleep. He couldn’t understand how people perform well on so little sleep as he needs sleep like I do.

Early in my career especially before the kids came along, I worked longer hours whether or not I needed to because management viewed it as a good thing. Good thing equals promotions and opportunities. The other thing I noticed — working from 9am to 7pm was viewed more positive than someone who worked from 7am to 5pm even though they’re the same number of hours.

Of course, we won’t see a culture change in the near future toward returning to the 9am - 5pm work week or providing more vacation time. Not with the worries of losing your job to India or another country where its people work for less money and longer hours. However, many articles report that Generation X and Generation Y want more work-life balance.

I belong to GenX. In the mid-’90s, I wanted to climb the ladder and fast. By the late ’90s and early 2000, the ladder lost meaning. Of course, I wanted to get promotions and such, but not by sacrificing my family and life outside of work. This change didn’t come because of GenX, but rather parenthood. Folks in my generation weren’t even having kids yet — so there wasn’t a Gen X influence.

However, I also value enjoying my life and experiencing new things and making friends. We reflect more on memories from outside of work than work. Sure, I’ve got fond memories of something I accomplished at work or a screw up that I can’t forget in spite of trying — I think more about memories involving family, friends, and activities.

Cliche’ but true — how many people look back on their lives and wish they had worked more? When people ponder their past and wishes, work-related regrets rarely come up. It’s more “spend time reading, spend time with family, travel…”

2 Comments

Hello, my name is Dr. Jonathan Greenburg and I treat sleep disorders like sleep apnea and snoring in my clinic near Los Angeles.

The points that you make I couldn’t agree with more! People need restorative sleep (REM) in order to refresh their batteries and have a healthy life.

I just wanted you to know that bringing awareness to the issue of sleep and rest is so very important. Many people are unaware how much sleep affects daily performance and general health.

Thanks for the post… keep up the good work

Dr. Jonathan Greenburg DDS
http://www.apnea-treatment.com

I am in total agreement with your views regarding lower output/efficiency with long working hours.

I am an Indian living in India and would like to mention that yes, people in India do work for less money than people in the developed countries, and they work longer hours than what you & I consider is healthy. These people are getting salaries which are generally better than what they would have got otherwise, and often work long hours because it is something that is, IMHO, very ‘American’. As you pointed out, companies in the USA generally tend to view employees staying on till late in the evening as ‘better’ workers than others, and this has been carried over to wherever US based companies have their offices.

Thanks for the post, as it is very worrying that our youngsters, American or in India or elsewhere, are in this kind of situation which is very unhealthy.

Sanjay Dutt

What Do You Think?

 
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