Yesterday, I was reading about Ramsey Clark in Esquire online. The article is pretty good, but this paragraph struck me:
Reading that, afterwards, I realized that I'd seen this implicit admiration for people who don't sleep elsewhere. John Grisham's "The Firm". Every story about every startup I've ever heard told. Even my advisor, when he was telling me to work harder. I've never even seen a biography say, "He slept eight hours a day".
What is wrong with this place? Studies show that having enough sleep is explicitly tied to all sorts of benefits. Why, then, are the public role models people who barely go to bed?
When it's over, he walks in his slow, steady pace down to the cab. He's been going all day, on a couple hours sleep, barely even eating, but he shows no sign of it. "That was worthwhile," he says.
Reading that, afterwards, I realized that I'd seen this implicit admiration for people who don't sleep elsewhere. John Grisham's "The Firm". Every story about every startup I've ever heard told. Even my advisor, when he was telling me to work harder. I've never even seen a biography say, "He slept eight hours a day".
What is wrong with this place? Studies show that having enough sleep is explicitly tied to all sorts of benefits. Why, then, are the public role models people who barely go to bed?
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Reuters: "Some advice to take to heart -- take a nap "
But getting back to sleep, here's an excerpt from the Yahoo "Oddly Enough" news feed yesterday:
Re: Reuters: "Some advice to take to heart -- take a nap "
no subject
I think people don't get enough sleep because they can't. being in college we're not at that point yet (at points it feels like we are), but when your job demands 18-19 hours of work, and your job immensely important like Mr. Clark's, you basically don't get a full night's sleep unless the world stops.
we admire his workaholic nature, how he will never stop until he gets the job done. which again, is never. but it does produce results. our society likes results.
(no subject)