Sleeping at work......
 

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[Closed] Sleeping at work... do you..?

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I just did. First time ever in the designated 'sleep room'.

I now feel bad from both the grogginess that accompanies a 20 min power nap, and also for basically slacking off on work time (hi singletrack forum).  I snuck out rather sheepishly

I however may do it again tomorrow, depends on if i get on the beers tonight or have another heavy lunch.  I mean there is a sleep room for a reason right?


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 12:38 pm
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I often take a nap in my car some time after lunch. Don't feel guilty about it at all.


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 12:52 pm
 sbob
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I live at work, so yes.


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 12:56 pm
 DezB
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Micronaps at my desk all the time! Really funny the little dreams you can have in a few seconds.

Never a proper sleep though. I had a tour of the Google offices and they have these pods you can go in, that play you ambient music and mood lighting... niiiicezzzzzzzzzzz.


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 12:58 pm
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Can't do the short sleep think. I feel completely disorientated and need to reset my clock by watching something associated with time. Like the news or something.


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 1:01 pm
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I have a siesta almost every day after lunch. My dad used to and my grandfather before him. Just seems natural thing to do.


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 1:05 pm
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I’m comatose most of the time, what’s the difference 🤣


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 1:06 pm
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Yep - have been known to. Do the approach of a coffee & a 20 minute post lunch snooze.

I got into the habit of it when I smashed myself up falling off my bike & I was getting terrible sleep at night because I was in pain/uncomfortable, so I found it was the only way to get me through the day.

Stuck with it & i'm a fan - don't get that horrible graveyard shift feel from about 2-4pm now 🙂


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 1:06 pm
 IHN
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Constantly, but with my eyes open


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 1:07 pm
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Ill pop out to my car to have a nap across the back seats when feeling tired. Cant say I've felt any worse for it when coming back in.


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 1:09 pm
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Micronaps at my desk all the time! Really funny the little dreams you can have in a few seconds.

Sounds very familiar.

My first day at old work a very hungover colleague spent her lunch break sleeping on the floor under her desk. I was much more civilised, was working the day after Relentless, booked the meeting room for lunchtime and just went in there with a pillow


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 1:10 pm
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I reckon i can go into a trance with the radio on, comfortably warm and even better with the sound of rain then the slightest click and im wide awake again. Its not so good at the cinema neck bouncing up and down so my partner tells me


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 1:12 pm
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I fell asleep in the back cabin of the narrowboat I was building once after a cheeky lie down.

Awoke to my boss looking at me disapprovingly 😂


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 1:20 pm
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Constantly, but with my eyes open

Me too, I find glasses like this help.


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 1:23 pm
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Second sleeps are the best sleeps & keenly looked forward to on a sailing holiday.

Now I work from home most days I may re-introduce them into my day to day life. New sofa is arriving this evening so a Friday lunch time siesta may be on the cards!


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 1:28 pm
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On work days that involve a lot of driving I'll usually plan for a sleep stop. I lie across the seats of the van but can be a bit prone to cramp so end up slicking my legs out the window.

Had a sleep while parked on a meter in Glasgow once. Set a reminder to wake me up before the ticket expired. But the sleep was so gorgeous I ended up just feeding the meter every 20 mins and having another snooze. It got quite expensive


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 1:45 pm
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When I used to do nights, yes, every night I'd sleep through my 'lunch' break for 0330 to 0400.

Weirdly, some times you woke up feeling refreshed, but other times (the majority I'd say) I'd wake up feeling worse, cod and hungry too. Thank F I don't have to do nights any more.


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 1:48 pm
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Fat chance.  I have the loudest project manager known to man sat behind me 🙁


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 1:55 pm
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When the office aircon thermostat is turned up to 26degC with a +/-4degC  tolerance before it starts cooling rather than heating, nodding off is inevitable.


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 1:58 pm
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I have a small scar on my forehead from falling asleep at my desk while 'working' and promptly headbutting the coffee cup on the desk.

That is the first and last time i have fallen asleep at work.


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 2:00 pm
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I some times nod off reading through tedious design or install & config documentation. Used to work with someone who'd disappear for an hour or so mid-morning, he would go to the server room for a nap.


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 2:02 pm
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Go and watch the Seinfeld episode where George is so used to sleeping at his desk that he gets it customized with a bed underneath. Arrives at work then gets in his bed, sets the alarm etc. Lolz


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 2:05 pm
 ton
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I have a resting place round the back in the warehouse. used once every now and then.


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 2:09 pm
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My late Irish buddy who was a solicitor used to lie down on the floor for a nap at lunch time, the story was that they got a new secretary and she thought he was dead. But you'd believe any story about him because he was so funny.

I sometimes nip out in the car and park in a quiet corner of a nearby car park for a 10 minute nap, it's very nice. Weekends at home I nap after lunch.

In the bad old days of British manufacturing there were legends about entire shifts at British Leyland being found asleep at night.


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 2:09 pm
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no never sleep at work, I do have a rest station though


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 2:21 pm
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Land of the siesta here, but I've never got into it really - even though I've got a 2-3h lunch 'hour', prefer to get some shopping done or go for a ride, but I do keep a thermorest at work for the odd occasion.  Weekends, definitely.


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 2:44 pm
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Only in long meetings. Oh and when I manage to make the lunchtime yoga I quite often get pretty lucid waking dreams during meditation, but not really sleeping.


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 2:56 pm
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Most days, to be honest.


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 3:41 pm
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No


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 4:09 pm
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Most days ..but I'm self employed and start early so don't feel in the slightest bit  guilty ..it's supposed to be really good for you too..


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 5:00 pm
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Sleep?  some shifts I barely have time to pee!


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 5:09 pm
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WFH, quite often an afternoon ‘power nap’.

On the ropes it’s quite tricky but I did nod off on a sunny roof once sat on a 200m rope bag waiting for some scaffs to get out of our way.


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 5:12 pm
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After a heavy social night the next day used to be challenging.

Until we realised we could go for a "meeting in the city", taking the Circle Line, and dozing while doing circuits of Zone 1. When you did wake up, you were never more than 20 minutes from the office...


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 5:29 pm
 Drac
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Shocked I didn't think there was so many firefighters on here.


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 5:34 pm
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I'm going to re find this thread next time someone moans about teachers holidays!!


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 5:36 pm
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Indeed AA - and when they complain about overpaid and underworked public servants. 😉


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 5:39 pm
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Once nodded off with my chin in my hand and other hand over the mouse.  Woke up realising what had happened - looked around.  No one seemed to have noticed (what does that tell you).  Still no idea how long I was asleep for.


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 5:47 pm
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Do it loads. I have very random work times, might not be able to start a job till 6pm after a 3pm job in London. The jobs are usually around an hour so not worth leaving the city.

Monday I have a 4am job and another job early pm. I may put my camping bed in the back of the Transit rather than my bike which is my other way of killing time between jobs.


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 6:49 pm
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Lazy bugger


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 7:02 pm
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I try to be! Still manage 40000 miles a year around all that sleeping/riding and actual on site doing stuff.


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 7:10 pm
 Drac
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I’m going to re find this thread next time someone moans about teachers holidays!!

To be fair you don't work afternoons.


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 7:13 pm
 DrJ
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It's normal in our head office in Beijing, but a suggestion we introduce the same practice in the UK was met with a stony refusal.


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 7:28 pm
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Sometimes go home for lunch (lucky enough to be 10 min from work by car, 20 min by bike), and a 20 min nap after lunch is great - at the end of the day (pun intended) I'm much more productive because of it.


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 7:39 pm
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Growing up abroad in a hot climate we always had an afternoon kip and never really got out of it. Still do, even when I was 'working' for a company, after lunch used to go out to the van and nod off for a bit. Feel much better afterwards. Much better than relying on coffee to fight through tiredness. Some people can't though, Mrs goes psychotic after if she 'accidentally' kips during the day.


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 7:50 pm
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i see dracs still not achieved the levels of mediocre comedian.


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 7:52 pm
 Drac
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We all have ambitions trail rat.


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 7:59 pm
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In my first job coding and testing, I sat behind my Indian boss as he mumbled through a test plan. And fell asleep in my chair. I'm not sure if he turned round and saw me or not, too polite to say.

Really funny the little dreams you can have in a few seconds.

I also fell asleep driving guests along an Italian motorway once. Only for seconds,  but in those seconds I dreamt I'd got back home and my girlfriend was shouting "YOU FELL ASLEEP?!? !??!", the shock of which woke me up fortunately.


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 7:59 pm
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Drac wrote

Shocked I didn’t think there was so many firefighters on here.

If only you stuck in at school you might have been good enough to join.


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 8:07 pm
 Drac
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If only you stuck in at school you might have been good enough to join.

Yeah I didn't do the colouring in class.


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 8:13 pm
 Kuco
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Use to have a quick nap at dinner times years ago. Worst one i remember was stopping for dinner on a hot summers day in some farmers field. Van parked next to the digger seat back boots off and feet up on the open door window and just went, woke up 4 hours later.


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 8:27 pm
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I sleep in meetings.

Room with no windows, corporated drone banging on in in a monotonous voice....and I have to drink several espressos and pinch myself constantly so I don't pass out.


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 8:38 pm
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Drac wrote

Yeah I didn’t do the colouring in class.

Yeah life must've been tough not being allowed to play with chubby crayons


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 8:58 pm
 Drac
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Every day I cry a little inside.


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 9:04 pm
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Whilst doing online training - of the not most interesting training - class 1 nics i was woken by my manager. I told her i was thinking. She told me next time do your thinking with your eyes open and your mouth shut.

I also fell asleep during the introductory chat when i worked for hmce given by the regional collector in charge ( though it had been a heavy lunch in the pub)


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 9:06 pm
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Current office job? Nope, unfortunately.

As a student? Hell yea! We used to take it in turns at Halfords after a heavy session the night before to nip through to the warehouse for a snooze. We had a duvet tucked behind some bike boxes on the pallet racking, it was a proper little nest.

Similarly, there was one particularly toasty summer spent tattie rouging (2008 maybe) when there were more than a few naps had. Tattie drills are really comfy, plus the foliage is useful to avoid been spied by the farmer 😀 . Manual labour, snoozes in the sunshine, and not a care in the world. Happy days.


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 9:17 pm
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jameoz, I was trying to reply to my brothers post (welshfarmer, without the 91) but it didn't land where I expected it to, and couldn't work out how to delete it!


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 10:11 pm
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Only one unofficial sleep at work, official ones being lunch hour in the car.

During the hot weather I wasn’t sleeping well as the flat is south facing and trying to sleep in 29 degrees was never going to work. One day we had an “all hands meeting” by conference call, basically one of the managers waffling on about how good we are. Not having to watch the screen I put my head on my forearms, and was ko’d!! I woke up a few minutes later to my colleague and manager s****ing.

Good job we all get on and nothing more has ever been said.


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 10:22 pm
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I do blocks of on call night shifts, does anyone know a way to set off an alarm when a watsapp message is recieved? 9/10 I wake up for but it would be less stressful and easier to sleep if my phone just kept beeping when a message was recieved until i got up and acknowledged it.


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 10:37 pm
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More than I thought having considered the question.

In current job there is quite a bit of mid summer napping, under the tractor is best to avoid sun burn. Winter has some extended lunch breaks in the Land Rover, quite an achievement to fall asleep with the rain hammering the roof.

Previous warehouses where I've worked have all had sleepy places; mezzanines full of seat covers, piles of carpet, big crates full of marquee linings and at another, boxes of baby clothes.


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 10:43 pm
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As a sponsored student and on my gap year I used to sleep in the work toilets for at least an hour each day. I used to call it bog-napping. At one point my boss went on long-term sick so I used to just sleep in his office.


 
Posted : 08/11/2018 11:24 pm
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Pretty much every time I do a long drive with work I will "become tired" and have a nap for safety reasons.


 
Posted : 09/11/2018 1:37 am
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In the bad old days of British manufacturing there were legends about entire shifts at British Leyland being found asleep at night.

Pff, used to do that in the power stations if they weren't too busy getting pissed. There's the legend at work about one guy who was sent back by his missus after she refused to let him back in the house as he never left in that state. And the other who stayed in work pissing up for several days over Christmas with each shift coming in, seemingly he just crashed out in a laundry pile whenever he needed a recharge.

In all honesty I'm not above resting my eyes on a night shift but I have a pager and a radio that stays loud enough that I hear it. Never sleep more than a light doze anyway.


 
Posted : 09/11/2018 2:16 am
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Is there any other job apart from fireman that actually makes the effort of putting beds in the work place?

Gotta be one of the cushiest jobs to be fair; decent wage .. no qualifications needed .. respected occupation .. sleep most of your nightshift👌

I used to ride with a few firemen; I remember one saying the most difficult bit about doing the nightshift was getting off the PlayStation before 12am ... gotta love a job like that😎


 
Posted : 09/11/2018 6:03 am
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Not for a while but back in the day I worked "somewhere" and our department converted a storeroom's shelves into bunks. There would be 6 of us all snug in work jackets dozing from 9 to about 1130 every day. Sometimes we were woken by a sheepish & peeved "supervisor" panicking that the building was going to blow up and could we come and take a look. ha.  🙂


 
Posted : 09/11/2018 6:27 am
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 actually makes the effort of putting beds in the work place?

only other ones i know   are in The City.  i.e you work so long and hard that you can sleep at the office too, no need to go home, stay here and work more!


 
Posted : 09/11/2018 7:05 am
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I do, but my passengers' screaming usually wakes me.


 
Posted : 09/11/2018 7:15 am
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In current job the boss occasionally disappears off in the van for a bit of kip, if I happen to be in the van with him when he goes off I either fiddle with my phone or rest my eyes for a bit (I can’t nap, I need a full 8+ hours otherwise I feel hungover) Luckily we know all of the estate very well and have radios in case management need us. When we both had flu earlier in the year we both at times fell asleep standing up


 
Posted : 09/11/2018 7:34 am
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Sometimes, maybe 20 times a year I'll sleep in the car over lunch

Most of the time I work through

If I have a morning meeting anything up to 11 I'll set of at 5 to avoid traffic and sleep til meeting time, more often that not someone is late so we have to wait for them


 
Posted : 09/11/2018 2:43 pm
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For nearly two years up until mid-April this year I worked as part of a team of agency drivers picking up and delivering cars for British Car Auctions. This meant that it would be planned by ou team leader/driver to have a carry-over, a car we would take home over night, deliver next morning, then be picked up and taken to our next pick-up address. We covered the South-west, whichin reality meant going as far into Cornwall as Helston and Land’s End, up as far as Liverpool, and into London and Eastbourne, even Norfolk. Which meant half the day stretched across the back seats of the team car, latterly a C4 Grand Picasso. I put a folded travel blanket in the back to lean back against, feet across the rearmost two seats, made up a cushion with gloves and a beanie, and slept for most of the time I wasn’t driving.

Getting paid to drive other people’s cars, some pretty s****y, listening to the Radio, using someone else’s fuel, and sleeping when I wasn’t driving, which meant a total of roughly six out of twelve s total, was rather fine. Sadly, my new job involves me walking around the site up to four-five miles a day, with brief bits of driving cars around.

I miss the old job...


 
Posted : 11/11/2018 12:29 am
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I don't think I've ever had a job where there's been time to sleep!  I do remember many years ago when we first got a computer in the school office, going on a training course (data protection, so pretty dull!) with the headteacher - I coughed fairly gently to wake him up.  I don't think anyone else noticed...


 
Posted : 11/11/2018 9:39 am

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