Here’s a common scenario. During the week you stay up late reading, watching TV, working, or doing things on your computer. You get up early for work, maybe only getting about five hours of sleep. After all, you can “make up” this sleep on the weekend.
Then on the weekend, you sleep in an extra couple of hours each day. That should make you sleep better right? This is probably a fairly common practice for most people. Americans average sleeping 6.8 hours per night during the week and 7.4 hours during the weekend.
The idea of sleep binging revolves around the notion of a “sleep debt”, which is an important concept when discussing sleep deprivation and sleep binging.
The way you acquire a sleep debt is by getting less sleep than what is required depending on your age. Every hour you're short is effectively adding to your "debt". Sleep debts are extremely important to correctly understand, because there are common misconception about what a sleep debt is and how you “repay” it.
For starters, the word debt is misleading because it doesn’t work like money – you can’t just pay your debt back in a lump sum. Sleep studies show that getting one or two long nights of sleep do not remove the effects of sleep deprivation.
The way you DO repay your sleep debt is by establishing a healthy pattern of sleep. In the same scenario above, what you would want to do to repay your sleep debt is by getting extra sleep on the weekend and getting enough of a little bit of extra sleep everyday the following week. In other words, getting over sleep deprivation involves consistent, restful sleep.
The reason binge sleep doesn’t work is that your brain doesn’t respond to loss of sleep like a money debt. You can’t just “repay” your debt and suddenly be okay. You repay your debt by establishing a consistent pattern of getting enough sleep.
So if you binge sleep on the weekend, you might feel good in the hours after you wake, but the effects of sleep deprivation will remain.
Commonly expected ranges of sleep we need are [National Sleep Foundation]:
Of course, we are all individuals and your sleep requirements may differ from these. These are simply some guidelines.
In short, chronic sleep deprivation can make you feel “abnormal,” less like yourself, a “worse” version of your normal self, and so on. Over time, these feelings and physical symptoms of sleep deprivation can weigh on our emotional and physical vitality. Alone or compounded with other symptoms, this can lead to depression.
Sleeping disorders can lead to sleep deprivation if not treated. Some of the most common sleep disorders that generally result in chronic and sometimes severe sleep deprivation are:
If you are struggling with chronic sleep deprivation, please contact us or take a free online sleep test.