HACKER Q&A
📣 softwaredoug

How has long-term work from home changed your sleep habits?


I am a techie dad, in his 40s, with 2 school aged kids. My partner and I both work from home.

I'm noticing some changes to my sleep from pre-pandemic. Particularly, the often overwhelming desire to take a post-lunch siesta/short power nap (as my work schedule allows).

I'm curious if this is some kind of natural thing that happens? And if others experience the increased desire to nap while WFH? Or if there's other sleep changes you've noticed in a WFH routine?


  👤 japhyr Accepted Answer ✓
Almost all my life when working on-location, I've wanted to nap after lunch. I usually got through that by just being a little foggy and less productive after lunch.

When I started working from home, I did nap during that time. My productivity over the course of a day didn't change much, the only difference was that no one cared if I napped after lunch. These days I don't nap much, but that's largely because my work is even more distributed in chunks throughout the day. I think I've changed my daily routines to a degree that I don't get that post-lunch fatigue as much anymore.


👤 kf6nux
Initially, pandemic life was much worse for my sleep. Stress, burnout, exercising less (not even walking to/from the office), getting older, eating worse, all contributed to sleep problems (sleeping too much).

I changed jobs, saw a doctor, started eating better, am forcing some exercise, improved body chemistry, improved blood pressure. I'm sleeping better now than before the beginning of the pandemic, I have an easy time staying awake during the day, and I'm not even having caffeine anymore.

Being in your 40s, a reduction in sex hormones could be a contributing factor as well. Consider getting them checked.


👤 muzani
I sleep at 9 PM, wake up at 4-5 AM. Life without commute is good. My kids actually wake up earlier too now that they don't have to wake early for school.

I've often napped in midday, even at the office. Ironically, I sleep more consistently at the office (in my car) than I do at the home office with a bed nearby.


👤 santa_boy
A power nap of 15-30 mins at noon is a huge productivity hack for me. By self-observation, I think it is a natural need and should be addressed.

👤 tticvs
I don't nap but I have definitely found it easier to keep a regular sleep schedule. Probably because I can intersperse my household chores (laundry, tidying up, grocery shopping) in the workday as a break so I it doesn't compete with personal time after work. Much easier to not stay up late and therefore get an earlier start.

Also I don't drink as much at home so my sleep quality is definitely better.

(Note I don't yet have kids and my partner has a similiar sleep schedule as me)


👤 dv_dt
Commute time was switched over to more frequent morning exercise and that’s been a big plus to my energy and productivity level.

👤 AltF4me
I don't nap, but I do sleep in longer. I don't need to rush out the door to catch a train, but sometimes it means starting work before showering.. And taking a shower on my lunch.

👤 BigRedDog1669
I have been having this problem. As a lot of things have been changing it's hard to tell what is causing it. Sometimes I feel worse after taking the naps, sometimes better.

Things that I think might have an effect on daytime tiredness: sleep hygiene (screens, stress before going to bed), eating patterns (I think eating a lot for lunch makes me more tired), sugar consumption, caffeine, engagement of work, getting exercise regularly, getting some exercise when the tiredness hits vs taking the nap.


👤 tluyben2
No (I never worked in an office), but the pandemic did; since about 1.5 years (since the actual lockdown), I start at 5 am and go to bed at 9 pm. I always (the previous 25-odd years of being an adult) woke up around 11 am and went to bed around 3 am. I guess I went the reverse of what many who worked in an office before did.

👤 cm2012
I go to bed at 2am and wake up at 10 now

👤 me_me_mu_mu
I sleep way less in return for way more productivity. I sign off work at 4pm. Start dinner prep and exercise. 6pm to 1am work on side projects, play games with friends, whatever. Sleep. Wake up at 7:30am and start over.

👤 replwoacause
They've changed for the worse. I stay up later because I don't have to be up at a specific time to shower, commute and sit in an office. I normally go to bed around 2 AM and sleep until 8:30 AM.

👤 nicbou
Not at all, but it did change my work schedule (I'm self-employed). I'm much more aware of the weather, because I prefer to work on cloudy days and enjoy the sun when it comes out.

👤 tkiolp4
Not by much. I usually go to sleep between 1am and 2am, and get up around 9 and 10.

👤 anotheryou
no commute: get up later, have more time, no need to stay up longer to get something private done, and if I stay up longer not hat bad because I can sleep longer.

All splendid


👤 TheMonarchist
I sleep when I'm sleepy.