Back in May I was fired by my first sleep doctor's team of PA's. You can read about it here if you really want to.
And in June, I went to a new sleep doc. You can read about that appointment here. Back in June, the new doc told me to work on extending my sleep time. Not by taking naps, but by working on "both ends" of the night: She told me that since I'm a night owl, that if the only way I can get up to more than 5 1/2 hours of sleep is by sleeping until 8:00 or 8:30 (instead of moving bedtime back to 12:30) then I should do that since I've got the freedom to sleep that late right now in the summer. And worry about fixing the problem of getting up in time to teach in the fall closer to fall.
And how has that strategy worked out?
Before starting the new strategy this was the situation on a typical night:
- Time into Bed: between 1:20 and 2:00 AM
- Time Out of Bed: between 7:30 and 7:40 AM (required an alarm to get up)
- Total Time in Bed: between 5:30 and 6:00 hours consistenly
- Latency to Sleep: 5 or 10 minutes
- Number of Wakes: 3--4 wake ups on a typical night, some of which were 10+ minutes long
- Total Sleep Time: between 5:00 and 5:45 hours most nights.
- Sleep Efficiency = (total sleep time)/(total time in bed) > 85% on about 50% of the nights
- Time into Bed: between 3:00 and 4:00 AM
- Time Out of Bed: between 8:00 and 9:30 AM (and I'm getting up WITHOUT the aid of an alarm)
- Total Time in Bed: between 4:30 and 5:30 hours
- Latency to Sleep: 5 to 10 minutes
- Number of Wakes: 1--3, and only rarely are they more than 10+ minutes long
- Total Sleep Time: between 4:00 and 5:45 hours per night.
- Total Sleep Time: between 4:00 and 6:00 hours per night.
- Sleep Efficiency = (total sleep time)/(total time in bed) > 85% on about 75% of the nights
So clearly the strategy of just being my night owl self is not working in the sense of increasing my time asleep. And it's not hard to see why: Night owlishness has crept into Bed Time much more so than Wake-up Time. I think at today's appointment this development was a bit of a surprise to the new doc.
On the other hand, the news is not all bad: The number of wakes AND their lengths are really now down to something that doesn't seem to bother me on most nights. And overall sleep efficiency is up a bit. And I continue to see "almost refreshed" in terms of how my body feels upon waking on a pretty regular basis, although my mind is still waking up "kind of groggy" on most days. The daytime sleepiness, lack of energy, and cognitive problems have not gotten any worse even though I'm sleeping less. Indeed, there's been some improvement in terms of daytime sleepiness and overall energy level there's actually been some improvement when I look at the figures from my RobySue's Daily Data spreadsheet that tracks a whole bunch of things related to How do I feel?
And of course, there are nights where I have a lot of more restlessness and more wakes than these average figures, but they are becoming more rare and, notably, there is usually an identifiable trigger in the sense of non-CPAP, non-insomnia related stress or worries---such as some on-going department politics issues at work for example. I can deal with this kind of intermittent insomnia.
So if I were retired, I'd just declare victory and go home .... in the sense of: I'd be happy to continue to go to bed between 3:00 and 4:00 and sleep for as long as I do waking up without an alarm clock. And not getting too focused on how long I slept each night as long as the sleep was decent quality and I could function in the daytime.
But my fall semester starts in about one month and this crazy 3:30 to 8:30 sleep schedule just won't work once classes start. I need more sleep in the first place to cope with the day-to-day requirements of teaching and I need more cognitive ability during the daytime to focus better on what needs to be done as well as for learning student names.
So I really need to move that sleep schedule back to something closer to 1:00--7:00 by the end of August. Without losing any of the other progress I've made. So that's what I wanted to address at today's meeting with the sleep doc. And yes, the meeting did focus on that for the most part.
Her ideas? First---try a sleeping pill (rozerem this time). Even though I've said repeatedly that I don't want to go that route for multiple reasons I don't want to get into here. After a bit of touch and go on that, she finally did put on her doctor's thinking cap and came up with several things for me to try:
1) No caffeine at all. Last week I had already come to the conclusion that my beloved full caffeinated cup of coffee in the morning was indeed a migraine trigger and hubby and I have talked about this. And last night agreed I need to give "no caffiene" a good solid two week trial on the migraine front.
2) Going back to a stricter wake up time. But not doing it whole hog right away. The suggestion---which is reasonable---is to make myself get up at 8:00 for the rest of this week. On Monday, move wake up time back to 7:30 for the next week. And on the following Monday, move wake up time back to 7:00. (And if I'm brave enough, follow that by moving wake up time back to 6:30, which is really where it needs to be during the school year.) And hope that the bed time issue will begin to naturally resolve in the sense of naturally moving itself back towards 1:00 or 1:30.
3) Light therapy. As in getting a Light Box that's used for treating Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD) and starting to use it now for about 30 minutes as soon as I get up each morning.
4) As a backup for #2: If by the end of a week or two of "strict wake up time" I'm not making enough progress on moving wake up time from 8:00 to 7:00, I can also try readjusting my circadian clock by going the other way. In other words, take about a ten to fourteen day period to stay up later 2 additional hours (and waking up two hours later) until bedtime and wake up time are where I want them to be.
I've yet another follow up scheduled with her in two months. If I don't have an emergency visit to her during the month of August, that will be the first month since starting this adventure that I will have NOT been to see a sleep doctor or sleep doctor PA in a full year.



