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Making Friends with Sleep

Originally posted on March 16, 2018

By Scott Waletzko

In the second week of my March Maple Challenge, I added the Sleep Tracker to my daily routine. Every morning for the past 7 days I woke up, grabbed my tablet, and created a tracker. I’d enter the number of hours I slept, rate how I felt before going to bed, rate how I felt waking up, and rate my sleep quality. My favorite part of this exercise was that I’d then create a Sleep / Dream journal entry and quickly tap in everything I remembered about my dreams. For the first few mornings it was difficult to grasp the details of the dreams in my grogginess, but towards the end of the week I was able to remember and document more and more of my visions of slumber. It got to the point where typing on a tablet screen just wasn’t efficient enough – I had too much to enter in at once.

Here’s what I learned from doing this for the week:

I’ll keep tracking my stress and sleep and starting this week I’ll be adding daily Reflections. I’m planning on using the prompts from Crys Wood’s “Consider It (Vol 1)” Reflection package, which is exclusive to Maple (available for purchase in the Maple Store). She did a great job putting together these prompts just for our users, and since she’s a master at sparking insight with just a few words I’m looking forward to adding this to my routine.

I’ll let you know how it goes next week. Until then, Happy Mapling!


My sleep tracker journey is a bit different from Scott’s.  You see, sleep and I have not always been friends. 

For years, my travel schedule kept me from sleeping well.  Then it was lifestyle, stress, workload… all impacting my sleep. I would lay awake all night and then be an absolute beast all day.  I discovered my wearable had a sleep monitor and I started checking on my hours of sleep.  Based on what was reported, I should’ve been feeling fantastic – I was not.

It was time to improve my sleep hygiene and I began tracking in Maple.  Why do this while using a wearable?  Because that device is great at giving me physiological information – my heart or breathing rate, number of sleep disruptions, etc.  Nice quantifiable information.

Maple helped me track qualitatively – how did I feel before bed?  How rested was I when I woke up?  By looking at these measures I began to realize that the wearable data alone was not telling the entire story.  As Scott mentioned, relying solely on the information that technology offers is not enough.  We are a part of the equation too. When I started to put both types of information together, insights emerged. 

For example, I need a solid 8 hours of sleep.  7 hours and 50 minutes is not the same and it’s not enough.  I literally feel weighed down, unfocused and apathetic on those mornings – my body and mind telling me – “Not yet Chris! We have not finished the critical restoration work that sleep is intended to provide.” 

Tracking my sleep has allowed me to make real changes, for the better.  This is one area of self-care that I am unabashed about.  If I wake up feeling unrested more than two consecutive days then my evening plans change – early to bed. My friends occasionally tease me that grown people are not tucked into bed at 8:45 p.m.  I laugh with them and point out that if that is what they need to take better care of themselves then they should be. No sleep shaming allowed.

I also learned that to avoid that lying-awake-all-night scenario I needed to re-trigger my nightly wind down routine before my mind began racing.  Now, I interrupt those thoughts and remind myself this time is about resting, that is the only goal. I can typically get back to sleep now, even if I wake repeatedly throughout the night. 

Bottom line – I track daily.  It was an easy, fun way to learn more about how to best care for myself. I don’t sleep perfectly every night, but I am much more attuned to what is happening for me – physically, mentally, emotionally, cognitively – because I check with myself about sleep each morning. 

#SleepBetter # SleepHygiene #SelfCare #MeetMaple

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