9.5 hours recently. I need my sleep. I've completely sacrificed my down time, but it's worth it.
You are old though.
9.5 hours recently. I need my sleep. I've completely sacrificed my down time, but it's worth it.
For sure. I'll definitely be buying the revision. The Zelda deal was simply too good to pass up.
you need less sleep as you age I thought.
9.5 sounds like too much.
then why are old people sleeping all the time? That's just math
you mean like naps? That's just from staying up late, I don't think the lemon parties happen during the day.
I do wake up intermittently at night. Mostly because my daughter is kicking me in the face though.you need less sleep as you age I thought.
9.5 sounds like too much.
You'd just hand off to the fullback three times in the red zone anyway.effzee said:I don't mind if he isn't on the team, but considering our redzone troubles all these years (minus 2010-2011 during Vick's amazing run) it would be nice to finally have a huge target to throw the ball too.
how the fuck you survive on 1.5 hours sleep? meth much? Now the crazy elk pic smile makes sense to me
Just did my seat relocation....
Last year: Section 134, Row 34
This year: Section 134, Row 14
Hell yea!
I bet the hope here is that IF no one else picks him up at the current market price (whatever that maybe for him) they would like to bring him in closer to training camp or start of the season.
Then again it could have been just a false rumor that never materializes. I don't mind if he isn't on the team, but considering our redzone troubles all these years (minus 2010-2011 during Vick's amazing run) it would be nice to finally have a huge target to throw the ball too.
Studies show that people who sleep between 6.5 hr. and 7.5 hr. a night, as they report, live the longest. And people who sleep 8 hr. or more, or less than 6.5 hr., they don't live quite as long. There is just as much risk associated with sleeping too long as with sleeping too short. The big surprise is that long sleep seems to start at 8 hr. Sleeping 8.5 hr. might really be a little worse than sleeping 5 hr.
Read more: http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,1812420,00.html#ixzz1qQe4od76
Why so little? Twins are understandably harder but did you and your wife do any scheduling/routine with them? Just curious.bionic77 said:I was getting only 2 to 3 hours for the first six months when my twins were born.
It's likely. I had days where I didn't sleep at all.I was getting only 2 to 3 hours for the first six months when my twins were born. And I still worked 8 to 10 hours a day and then came home and took care of one of the kids.
To be fair I found like absolute shit, But it is possible.
Rams coach Jeff Fisher revealed at this weeks league meetings that St. Louis has received phone calls about the availability of quarterback Sam Bradford in a possible trade. Alper speculated this morning that the Cleveland Browns may have been one of the teams calling the Rams.
Per Tony Grossi of ESPNCleveland.com, Alpers speculation was dead on.
Citing multiple sources, Grossi reports that the Browns indeed made inquiries about Bradford, before unsuccessfully trying to trade up for the No. 2 spot in the draft.
The Browns overtures fell on deaf ears in St. Louis.
Clubs inquired, Fisher said. But there was no consideration whatsoever on our part [to trade Bradford].
Why so little? Twins are understandably harder but did you and your wife do any scheduling/routine with them? Just curious.
For the first two months, I was getting about 6-7 a night at best in three hour intervals as Abby would wake up and want fed. She's nearly at the 3 month mark now and we have a set routine for her that we established very early on. Cuddling/playtime for about a half hour at 8pm, bath time at 8:30, feeding until 9pm and then she goes down for bed at 9:10-9:15.
She sleeps from then until about 7am these days. She occasionally wakes up at 1am or 3am for a feeding but it's a rarity anymore.
It is worth noting that my wife and I impose a very regimented schedule for our children and we're pretty inflexible about breaking it specifically because it makes it easier to get them to do what we need them to do.
Clarity on the Browns inquiring about Bradford:
http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2012/03/28/report-browns-inquired-about-sam-bradford/
You'd just hand off to the fullback three times in the red zone anyway.
Brandon Jacobs is a 49er.
Awesome! I have mine scheduled @ 2:15. How was the process?
from a Time magazine article. Night schedules suck cajun. Hopefully you don't have to do that too long.
Why so little? Twins are understandably harder but did you and your wife do any scheduling/routine with them? Just curious.
For the first two months, I was getting about 6-7 a night at best in three hour intervals as Abby would wake up and want fed. She's nearly at the 3 month mark now and we have a set routine for her that we established very early on. Cuddling/playtime for about a half hour at 8pm, bath time at 8:30, feeding until 9pm and then she goes down for bed at 9:10-9:15.
She sleeps from then until about 7am these days. She occasionally wakes up at 1am or 3am for a feeding but it's a rarity anymore.
It is worth noting that my wife and I impose a very regimented schedule for our children and we're pretty inflexible about breaking it specifically because it makes it easier to get them to do what we need them to do.
Brandon Jacobs is a 49er.
from a Time magazine article. Night schedules suck cajun. Hopefully you don't have to do that too long.
About 5 1/2 for me. I tried to cut it to 4 hours a night a while back, but I kept having to get a nap in so that didn't work. Protip: If you want to cut your sleep back, get up at the same time every day and slowly start staying up later and later. Training yourself to get up on time is the important part.
About 5 1/2 for me. I tried to cut it to 4 hours a night a while back, but I kept having to get a nap in so that didn't work. Protip: If you want to cut your sleep back, get up at the same time every day and slowly start staying up later and later. Training yourself to get up on time is the important part.
Yeah I get up at like 9:45/10 am every morning. But when i try to stay up later I just end up falling asleep watching tv.
I think it's time for Holmgren to leave. Say what you want about the Jets GM when he wants something he has the executive ability to get it.
Ugh, that's a killer. My wife tried that shit one night with my first daughter and I couldn't sleep for shit. Constantly worried I'd turn over and suffocate the baby or something, etc. That put an end to that. The first kid was a lot harder for us. We made a lot of mistakes like not imposing a schedule early on and other decisions that first time parents make that end up biting you in the ass.DeaconKnowledge said:My wife fell in love with the idea of our daughter sleeping in our bed. Got so bad she WOULD NOT sleep in the crib. She could sense when she was put in, even while sleeping. Took 8 months to get her to fall asleep in the crib, a year to sleep the night.
Why so little? Twins are understandably harder but did you and your wife do any scheduling/routine with them? Just curious.
For the first two months, I was getting about 6-7 a night at best in three hour intervals as Abby would wake up and want fed. She's nearly at the 3 month mark now and we have a set routine for her that we established very early on. Cuddling/playtime for about a half hour at 8pm, bath time at 8:30, feeding until 9pm and then she goes down for bed at 9:10-9:15.
She sleeps from then until about 7am these days. She occasionally wakes up at 1am or 3am for a feeding but it's a rarity anymore.
It is worth noting that my wife and I impose a very regimented schedule for our children and we're pretty inflexible about breaking it specifically because it makes it easier to get them to do what we need them to do.
Ugh, that's a killer. My wife tried that shit one night with my first daughter and I couldn't sleep for shit. Constantly worried I'd turn over and suffocate the baby or something, etc. That put an end to that. The first kid was a lot harder for us. We made a lot of mistakes like not imposing a schedule early on and other decisions that first time parents make that end up biting you in the ass.
I think that's usually why they say the second is easier. You just know more.
I think people need to do what their comfortable with. My wife and I did the "do whatever you like" thing with our first and it was a miserable time for us. It took her nearly 7 months to sleep more than 4 hours a night and she went to bed at varying hours.levious said:My thoughts were always, when they're babies, just do what they want. I never liked the concept of "training" a baby.
Abby sleeps in her bouncer. One thing I do agree with is not to force a kid to sleep somewhere they don't want to. She didn't like her crib off the bat but you put her in her bouncer and her eyes starting shutting immediately. We didn't argue. Eventually she'll out grow it and we'll move her. No hurry on that front.AngmarsKing701 said:We went with a cradle next to our bed.
Makes sense. A choice I would also make.bionic77 said:*The doctors gave us a choice of some medicines, potentially surgery or homeopathic (what we choose). I would rather not sleep then subject my kids to unnecessary medical treatment.
Plays a lot on special teams though, would Jacobs do the same if Dixon was out?Things don't look good for Anthony "Dancing" Dixon..
p
My thoughts were always, when they're babies, just do what they want. I never liked the concept of "training" a baby. Once I felt like we were communicating on some level (almost a year old?) then we started with stricter things. I really don't remember much.
Adapting to whatever the kid wants can work when you have one. When we had our second kid it decided it wanted to sleep all day and party all night, which meant my wife basically had to be up 24/7 because she also had a 2 year old to deal with during the day.
When we had our 3rd, we basically had to say piss on whatever you guys want, if this has any chance of working at all then you're doing it our way from now on.