| How to Nap | ||
| Introduction | How To | Why Not |
| Introduction |
| Some people say sleep is a waste of time | ||
| Some people are always tired because they cannot get enough sleep | ||
| You are a Bike Racer and resting is a very important part of training |
| The goals of napping are: |
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| When you workout, you are on the bike, or lifting weights, or running >> you are stressing your body. In between workouts, you body responds to the stress by changing your heart, your lungs, your muscles and everything that was exercised during the workout so that your body is better prepared for that stress in the future. If you rest properly, then your body comes back for the next workout stronger than before. If you do not rest properly in between workouts, then you will be slower and weaker in your next workout. | ||
| Trimming bushes in your yard is a good analogy: If you trim the bushes ( working out ) every day, the bushes will get smaller and smaller and may die - because you are not allowing them the time they need to fill out after a trimming. If you do allow them the water and time ( rest ) to recover, then the bushes will fill out and look better than before you trimmed them. | ||
| Other sleep related causes of fatigue: |
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| So, what if you do not have the time or the resources to rest properly in between workouts? | ||
| is there a way to rest more efficiently? | ||
| Yes: take a GOOD nap immediately after your ride | ||
| Done right, this quick nap dramatically decreases recovery time | ||
| How To |
| Napping is a skill that is learned. The following are the things that make me an efficient napper. In general, you will be able to apply what I do, to what you need to do to also be a good napper. | ||
| Taking a 30 minute "power nap" right after a ride is something I do not do naturally. So I have taught myself how to nap and to make napping easier to do, I follow a sequence of events that are the cues to my body: "It is time to nap RIGHT NOW" | ||
| The Napping Environment: |
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| The Napping Process: |
| I nap after Tuesday and Thursday morning's intervals and before I go to work. Obviously I would not normally nap at 6:30am on Tuesdays and Thursdays, but I need those naps or I will be very tired at work. | ||
| When I first tried napping, I would lay in bed wide awake - which is bad because I was teaching myself how to not sleep, and I was learning to associate my bed with "I cannot sleep here" | ||
| So I decided to do what I do to get ready for a race - have a routine that tells me: "It is time to do this" | ||
| My nap routine is: | ||
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| Notice that my routine has these characteristics. It: |
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| Initially, I needed to nap for 45 to 90 minutes, because (1) it took a while to get to sleep, and (2) I kept waking up. Spending so much time napping was an inefficient use of time. And because I was not good at napping, I was finishing the nap still a little tired. | ||
| Now, I am out cold in less than 2 minutes and I wake up refreshed after only 30 minutes. It took about a month to teach myself how to nap well. Part of being a good napper is, during step 8 above, you need to sort of throw a switch in your head and then it's lights out. I do not know how to describe it, other than to say that for a couple seconds it feels like when you were a child and you put your tongue on a 9 volt battery. | ||
| Waking Up: | ||
| You will wake up with what the Doctors call "Sleep Inertia" - you are a little sleepy when you wake up ( it probably took a $1 million government grant to figure that out ). The point is: Wake up and get going! | ||
| When to bail out of a Nap: | ||
Remember: Where you sleep, and the sequence of steps to get to sleep, are learned
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| Why Not? |
| When will napping cause more fatigue? |
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