September 20, 2006

 

Tokyo Big on Power Naps

Tokyo…where commutes are long and work often stretches across the weekends. Twelve hour days? Everybody’s doing it. And sometimes death comes knocking. The Japanese call it…Karoshi…death from overwork…claiming roughly 150 lives a year. So the Japanese are embracing a new cure for stress that’s really a very old idea…that’s right, the nap…just like in kindergarten.

Welcome to the Napia salon in downtown Tokyo, where for about SEVEN bucks the harried can buy 20 minutes of peace and quiet and ease the stress of the day even if it’s on the sly.

http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2006/09/18/asia_letter/main2020370.shtml

 

Power Nap Tips

Be efficient about it, too, so you can make the most of your nap time. Here are some tips that that will help maximize the benefits of the power nap:


Bring comfort to work. Anthony suggests bringing a mat to work instead of sleeping on the floor, and maybe a blanket and pillow.Find a comfort zone. "Figure out how to have an effective nap, so find a comfort zone," says Anthony. "Do you need a blanket, your feet up, or your glasses off? Find your comfort zone and use that to help you nap well."

Use tricks. "Use what we call napnomic devices to help yourself fall asleep," says Anthony. "Use a radio, white noise, eye shades, temperature -- whatever you need to help you fall asleep."Keep it short. "Keep your nap to about 10-20 minutes," says Anthony. "Over 30 is too much because then you are getting into the deeper levels of sleep."Be creative about where you nap. "If your office doesn't have an employee lounge that you can nap in, find a quiet spot to curl up in -- other than the bathroom or your car, which are not very nap friendly," says Anthony.


Set your alarm. If you want to make sure your boss isn't ticked off about you catching some shut-eye on the job, and to help avoid slipping into a deep sleep, set your watch alarm, or have someone call you so you wake up on time and can get back to work, bright eyed and bushy tailed.

Get your sleep at night, like nature intended. "The important thing to remember about napping is that if you get sufficient sleep at night, you don't need to nap when you're meant to be awake, whether it's in a pod or elsewhere," says Marcia Stein, spokeswoman for the National Sleep Foundation. "If you feel sleepiness when you've had enough sleep, that may be a signal that something is wrong and you should see a doctor."

The Power of Napping


 

Burglars Need Power Naps too

A MAN who allegedly took a nap midway through robbing a Brisbane inner-city newsagency while he waited for his getaway ride has been charged, police said today.

Burglar takes cat nap on the job | PerthNow

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Many types of Naps!

Isn't it about time we worker bees in the New World staged a Nap Revolution? Sleeping on the job should be encouraged and rewarded. Companies could set up a sliding pay scale depending on what type of nap the well-rested employee has taken.


The categories could go as follows:


Royal siesta: A sudden midday slumber so deep and powerful you're convinced you've slept straight through to the following morning. This is done on straight time.


Hypno nap: Usually experienced at the office during a mandatory Powerpoint presentation titled "Macroeconomic Modeling, Anatomy of the Masticatory System and You." Management pays time-and-a-half.


Power nap: Similar to the "power lunch" from the yuppie heyday of the '80s, this also involves two martinis. Employers should be responsible for bartender's gratuity and your cab ride home to your cot.


Disco nap: Intense-but-brief snooze prior to a late night of working/partying. Negotiable rate.

Nero nap: Half-sleep and half-daydream in which visions of Vespas and Roman holidays dance in your head. It's a freebie.

Tallahassee Democrat - www.tallahassee.com - Tallahassee, FL.

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