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MORNING LARKS VERSUS NIGHT OWLS
Medical science has shown that teenagers need a lot
of sleep, but college may not be the best place to get it. Once freed
from their parents' rules and regulations about when to go to bed and
when to wake up, college students choose to turn night into day. Since
even the best of class schedules will have the occasional morning class,
and many college students hold down jobs that may require their presence
in daylight hours, most college students do not average eight hours of
sleep a night. Now some try to make up for this by taking naps during
the day, sometimes during those classes and sometimes in their room, or
by sleeping till noon or later on the days that they don't have class.
If you're the type who has been used to sleeping eight hours straight on
most nights, you can literally plan for a rude awakening.
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Q.
I may not have chosen my roommate as a friend,
but she's certainly nice enough and I do like her. The problem is that
she has all these morning classes and goes to bed around 11 p.m. That's
usually when the dorm starts jumping, and I have no intention of missing
out on the fun. But I'm always stuck going to someone else's room
because my roommate needs her beauty rest. Since I like the girls in the
rooms next to ours, I don't want to move out. Is there a way I can get
her to move out? |
A. Have you asked her? Many colleges have quiet
dorms or floors and it sounds like she might be happier in one of those,
so maybe if you asked her, she'd be delighted. Of course, before you do
that, check out if there is any room in one of those dorms first.
If that is not an option, then I would talk to her
about some compromises. For example, on Friday and Saturday nights, she
doesn't have to go to bed so early. Why not ask her to help you sponsor
some get-togethers in your room on those nights. She could split the
cost of getting some soda and chips, for example. That would allow you
to repay those other girls whose rooms you're always in. Definitely let
her know that her sleep habits do bother you, and then see what you can
work out. According to resident advisers I spoke with, the issue of
living on different schedules is one of the most common problems among
roommates. If you've got a schedule that's chock full of early morning
classes and your roommate never goes to bed before 4 a.m., then you're
going to be sleep-deprived, and that makes it very hard to absorb all
this knowledge the college is doling out. And it's not just nighttime
sleep that can be affected, because if one roommate wants to take an
afternoon nap while the other is watching their favorite soap, the
conflict will continue into the daylight hours as well.
This is not only a roommate issue, because it's
usually the entire dorm that's making enough noise to wake up the dead.
And let's face it, if all your friends are up, you're not going to want
to miss out on the action, whatever it is, so to some degree you're
going to have to adapt.
If you're planning your class schedule before you
actually arrive at college, be sure to leave some mornings free so that
you can sleep late. You can only go so many days in a row on four or
five hours' rest. Pack some earplugs. There will be nights when you're
utterly exhausted and will need to conk out before dawn. Remember, sleep
deprivation has been used as a form of torture, so don't suffer
needlessly. Cat naps can be quite refreshing. Even 15 minutes' worth of
sleep in between classes can keep you going.
Don't abuse caffeine, in whatever form. You need to
sleep to absorb what you are studying, so staying up all night before an
exam will only have a negative impact. If you really are having problems
staying awake in class, go to see your RA. This is one roommate problem
where there is the potential for help. If others in your dorm report
having the same problem, then you can switch roommates so that you share
quarters with someone who also likes to get to sleep at a reasonable
hour.
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Additional Resources on College Life include:
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