How to get by on 5 hours of sleep a night

by Steven Aitchison on March 7, 2009 · 42 comments

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Author: Steven Aitchison (433 Articles)

I am the owner of this blog and write about personal development with my passions being belief formation, thoughts, perceptions and emotions. You can get my FREE video course to help Change Your Life at www.AlterYourJacket.com

For a few years know I have been getting by on 4 -5 hours of sleep and I didn’t realise how unusual that was until a few weeks ago when I was having a conversation with some of my work colleagues.  A lot of them said something like ‘Oh I need my 8 hours of sleep every night’.  It got me to thinking where this myth of needing at least 8 hours of sleep per night came from.  So I done some research and found it comes down to science.  It’s the scientists that say we need at least 7 – 9 hours of sleep per night depending on age, gender and working patterns.

So why do I need only 4 -5 hours and other people, like my wife, need about 8 hours of sleep per night?

I decide to try a little experiment.  For the last few weeks I have been trying my hardest to sleep for 8 hours per night.


My results were strange.  The first few days I kept on waking up at 4.30 – 5.00am.  I forced myself to stay in bed and try to fall back asleep, I dosed on and off.

By the 5th day I was able to sleep for about 7 hours before waking up.  The thing is I felt kind of groggy when I was getting up and the rest of the day felt rushed and I was trying to catch up with myself.

The last week I actually got into it and I was starting to get used to sleeping longer, on average about 7 – 7.5 hours per night.  I felt less groggy and got into the swing of the day a lot quicker.

A few days ago I went back to normal and got up at 5am after turning out the lights at about midnight.  I felt groggy again as my sleep pattern had been upset again however this morning I feel fine after getting my 5 hours of sleep.

What this has shown me is that we get by on what we are used to and our sleeping patterns will take care of itself once we have developed a sleep habit.  My habit is 5 hours of sleep and I believe my sleep cycle will work itself into my habit of 5 hours of sleep.

Of course our body needs to rest and we need sleep and our sleeping cycle, REM time, delta sleep, theta sleep and alpha sleep etc all play a role in replenishing our minds and body’s.  However, I believe the sleeping cycle will work itself into our own sleeping habit.

Here is how to get by on 5 hours of sleeper night

  1. Know your sleeping pattern just now.  You will already know what time, roughly, you go to bed each night and when you wake up.  Work out how much sleep you get per night.
  2. Decide on the pattern you would like  E.G. if you would like to get by on 5 hours per night or 6 hours.
  3. Break the new routine into a four week block.  For example if you currently get 8 hours per night just now and your goal is to get 5 hours per night.  Your pattern should be

Week 1 – Get 7 hours 15 minutes of sleep per night

Week 2 – Get 6 hours and 30 minutes of sleep per night

Week 3 – Get 5 hours 45 minutes of sleeper night

Week 4 – Get 5 hours of sleeper night

  1. Breaking it up this way will not shock your body and make you feel as groggy throughout the day.

Now the only thing you’ve got to worry about is what to do with the extra 15 – 25 hours per week.

I occasionally have the odd dose in front of the TV for 15 minutes but it’s one of those micro-naps when I feel totally refreshed after it.  I know have a lot more time to fit everything I do online into my schedule and feel much more productive throughout the day.

Some other articles you might be interested in:

How to Micro-Nap your way to success

90 Minutes sleep cycle for a better life

Sleep Paralysis

My Morning routine – Zen Habits

Wake up at 5am for 30 Days

How to become an early riser

Related Posts with Thumbnails

{ 40 comments… read them below or add one }

1 Dragos Roua March 7, 2009 at 10:06 pm

Thanks for sharing that. I was playing with my sleep patterns a lot during the last few years and I find that I can be quite comfortable with a 6 hours pattern. If I, however, slip into a 7 or 8 hours pattern I can accommodate it very quickly, in about 3 days. So, I totally back up what you’re saying here :-)

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2 moxie March 10, 2009 at 2:21 am

i would love to get by on 5 hrs of sleep a night… my body seems to like the 8-10 hours of rest i give it, though. i’m gonna try this and hopefully it’ll work out! :)

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3 Miki March 10, 2009 at 4:42 pm

I’ve always done better on about 6-1/2 hours sleep a night. If I get too much more, I’m groggy. Any less, dragging my feet. My body knows what I need. Occasionally, I sleep in and get 8 hours, but that’s only when I really need it. I love the early mornings when everything is peaceful.

I never really thought about changing my sleep pattern…it works for me!

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4 sleigh bed March 12, 2009 at 9:22 am

I agree to the doctor who says that every person uses to sleep 7/8 hours every day for good health

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5 Tim Brownson March 12, 2009 at 11:06 am

This really intrigues me because I’m a mess on too little sleep. For years when I swam regularly my morning times would always be down on my evening times.

I’m now 46 and have decided to go with the flow so to speak and stop fighting my natural inclinations.

There is research that suggests people that only get about 4 hours of sleep a night have mortality rates 2.5 times higher than people that get 8 hours. Having said that people that sleep over 10 hours have a mortality rate 1.5 times higher.

I’m not even sure what I’m saying other than I think it’s highly individual and needs tweaking for the individual.

Intersting thoughts Steve.

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6 Marlborogirl March 12, 2009 at 2:06 pm

As for me , I always envy those who can sleep only 5 hours,
I have no time left for self education , only work and home , that is very frustrating to me

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7 guy March 12, 2009 at 3:13 pm

I have no control over how much I sleep anymore.

It’s all down to my delightful children!

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8 Sherry March 12, 2009 at 9:19 pm

Pertinent article for me right now — have been trying to change my night-owl tendencies off and on for years because the world is much more accepting of the early bird. I’ve succeeded for only short time periods, and usually just end up a zombie, then catching up on weekends and missing out on much of life around me. I plan to try the above and see how it goes. Thanks for the good info.

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9 e cigarettes March 13, 2009 at 12:52 am

I couldn’t do it. I need at least 9 hours of sleep a night.

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10 Palmetto Dunes Rentals March 14, 2009 at 6:27 am

I think we should go to sleep at 9:00 pm to 10:am. for completely rest.

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11 Steven Aitchison March 15, 2009 at 10:59 am

Hi Sherry, good luck with the new schedule, let us know how you get on.

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12 Anonymous March 15, 2009 at 3:37 pm

I have trouble if I’m on less than 9 hours sleep.

Maybe it’s about melanin levels. Maybe because my apartment is noisy but I’d love to do 5 hours sleep.

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13 Oyun March 15, 2009 at 9:31 pm

I have no control over how much I sleep anymore. :)

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14 Webrevolve March 16, 2009 at 12:57 pm

Excellent article, very interesting read. I only get about 6 hours sleep max, have done for pver the past 2 months but i don’t feel good for it and need to get into a better routine. I am knackered in the morning and say to myself, i’m definitely going to bed earlier tonight, then when the night comes i feel fine and end up staying up past 1am

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15 Mark Foo| TheBigDreamer.com March 17, 2009 at 6:14 am

Hi Steven,

I get on fine with 6-7 hours of sleep every night. But I just have problem becoming an early riser. Gotta work more on that.

Great blog you have here!

Cheers~

Mark

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16 Canvas Art March 24, 2009 at 12:09 pm

“Nice Article”
But in my opinion 6 hours sleeping is good and stress free sleeping.

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17 CLEP March 25, 2009 at 12:54 pm

Sleep is also a time of rest and repair to neurons. Neurons are the freeways of the nervous system that carry out both voluntary commands, like moving your arm, and involuntary commands, like breathing and digestive processes.

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18 Fractional Air March 26, 2009 at 12:57 am

I will try this. I get about 8-9 hours a night and feel that my best time for productivity is early morning. If I could gain more early morning hours that would help me get more good things done.

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19 Mike March 28, 2009 at 9:33 pm

Nice post…with a 4 year old son, I find it hard to get enough sleep!

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20 Luke March 30, 2009 at 11:39 pm

Great information. Im 16/17 & i read alot that teenages should be getting at least 8hours if not more sleep a day. Well i love sleep, but strangly i hate going to bed. On weekends i can lay in my bed till the afternoon geting 12hours sleep. But when i go to college i get about 7hours sleep on avaerage. Going to bed about 12:30 & waking up (VERY TIRED) at 7:30. But even though im extreamly tired in the weekday mornings I still love staying up till the erly hours. I find you post very intresting & i would love to get 5/6 hours sleep WITHOUT feeling extreamly tired in the morning. Maybe if i continue this pattern through my weekends it can work. Ill give it a go & let you know on the results :)

Luke.

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21 Steve April 1, 2009 at 10:07 am

I used to sleep 7-8 hours/day. Now I’m thinking of following your suggestion so as to bring down the sleeping hours to about 5-6 hours/day. Thanks for your points!

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22 F April 1, 2009 at 3:23 pm

c

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23 Food Recipes Blog April 1, 2009 at 3:24 pm

I have been sleepless for 2 nights. Thanks for your sharing, very helpful

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24 Altesino April 4, 2009 at 5:27 pm

I’ve functioned on 5-6 hours since 2001. 4 years of grad school and then 2 kids… I just drink lots of diet coke!

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25 Bryan April 6, 2009 at 3:09 am

This is similar to the amount of time I sleep. I agree that what your used to ends up working. The higher mortality rate seems to make sense too.

From what I understand, most people’s hearts just have a certain amount of beats. If you are awake longer in your lifetime and your heart beats faster when you’re awake, it makes sense that you’d die sooner. But (to be dramatic) how much did you live?!

That being said, you can train your heart to beat less fast when you’re awake if you exercise regularly and eat well.

I try to stay away from caffeine too. I work at a coffee shop and yet I still keep that junk out of my system :) . Ever since I gave it up and dealt with the whole detox thing, I’ve never felt so awake in my life.

Ever tried polyphasic sleep?

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26 ankara haber April 10, 2009 at 5:54 pm

For me 5 hours not enough.. Never.

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27 Leaflet Distribution April 15, 2009 at 9:59 am

With children ranging from small to very big and dogs, sleep !! oh yes I did get that once, mind you not sure you should be doing it on the motorway.

Have always loved the thought of trying to live without time, eat sleep etc when you need to, and not doing so based on time.

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28 skkuumar April 18, 2009 at 4:13 pm

good input on sleeping pattern

skkuumar’s great blog post..listening skills on the telephone

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29 Bruxism April 21, 2009 at 11:24 am

Lots of people get by with only 5 hours sleep per night. I often wish I was one of them! However, I heard that research has shown that people who get less sleep increase their risk of certain medical conditions. (Possibly dementia among them, I can’t recall.)

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30 personal development plan April 25, 2009 at 3:11 am

I’ve read some article too that 5 hours sleep is enough to get going the next day but it never worked for me. I still feel groggy everytime I sleep less than 8 hours a day.

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31 Online Dating Service May 8, 2009 at 10:46 pm

An adult needs 6 to 6 1/2 hours of sleep a day. That’s what I follow because it was advised by a doctor. It’s not good to oversleep also.

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32 AJ KUmar May 20, 2009 at 12:09 am

Great article, I’m very interested in trying this. I get about 6.5-7 hours of sleep. I’m familiar with REM and how supposedly, a human can be perfectly fine with just 4 hours of sleep. That is if they can have perfect REM sleep. I do like the idea of breaking it into segments of 3-4 weeks. I will try it out!

AJ KUmar’s great blog post..Everyone Reads My Blog: How Generalizing Can Help You

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33 Leslie June 21, 2009 at 9:52 pm

Wow, I’m going to try that :) Thank you for sharing!

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34 jay July 9, 2009 at 10:11 am

I am an artist and often work late with 5-6 hours sleep on average. I think the important thing is not the number of hours but the quality of sleep. 5-6 hours of deep refreshing, uninterupted sleep is much better than 9-10 hours of patchy, disrupted sleep.

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35 Mark July 30, 2009 at 11:23 am

“Comment by Tim Brownson on 12 March 2009:

There is research that suggests people that only get about 4 hours of sleep a night have mortality rates 2.5 times higher than people that get 8 hours. Having said that people that sleep over 10 hours have a mortality rate 1.5 times higher.

remember, overall mortality rate is 100% in the end :)

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36 Alexander August 9, 2009 at 12:13 am

I never understod why one wanted to change one’s THOUGHTS. Wanting to change REALITY is a understandable wish, but doing it via “thinking” is futile. Action changes things, not “mind over matter” shemes.

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37 Kabir December 7, 2009 at 12:00 am

personally I can vary my sleep. I can get by with like 4 hours of sleep if i need to, and have like 13 hours of sleep on the weekend. So I guess i dont really have a pattern…

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38 Melissa January 8, 2010 at 7:25 am

5 hours – I am a big time lover of sleeping in for about twice that many hours, however I normally am given only 6 hours of sleep. Although, my situation may be under vary different circumstances than you, simply due to the fact that I’m a high school junior in the International Baccalaureate Program. I would like to try this sometime but I think I’ll have to wait till summer because I have no idea when my tests are scheduled. Personally I am the same way as Kabir, able to deal with 4 (although the day would still be pretty miserable) and sleep for many hours during the weekend to try and catch up, but don’t seem to get all the stuff I want to do done either way. I would really like to get my sleep schedule under control.

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39 Jon of GlutathioneDiseaseCure.com January 31, 2010 at 1:48 am

I too go to bed at midnight and awake at 4:30. I try to lay in bed till 5 and meditate. Then I get up. I have tried to sleep longer but it makes the day much harder. For me, when doing a similar experiment, it seemed that there were periods of tiredness during the day. Even one week into trying to sleep longer.

A lot of people have a problem sleeping altogether. One thing that will help is developing sleep hygiene.

One big thing is to get rid of any blue lights like from computers and electronic devices.
Jon of GlutathioneDiseaseCure.com´s last blog ..Jan 30, The Detrimental Diet are the Foods and Additives to Avoid to Maintian Health. My ComLuv Profile

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40 Ryan June 8, 2010 at 3:11 pm

I just managed 6 hours sleep and came straight to Google to find out if any others shared this same period! I was just confused as to whether the body is able to fully function on the 6 or so hours. It’s nice to know that we can possibly “train” ourselves to sleep as long as we feel necessary.:D

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