Someone recently asked me what lesson I learned that was having the biggest impact on my life. Without hesitation I responded: “Not making big decisions when I am tired.”
Maybe this lesson is so obvious to others that it isn’t worth mentioning. Or perhaps it is far more nuanced than sleep, and thus worth unpacking. Since this is my blog after all, I am going to proceed under the latter assumption, and if that isn’t the case for you, feel free to skip this one.
The thing is that when I don’t get enough sleep my world becomes grayer. I mean this in the literal sense. Every color I see is more muted. Regardless of how sunny the sky is, or how blue it might appear to others, there is a gray pallor over everything I see.
I also mean this in the metaphorical sense. Everything I think about also has a darker tint to it. It isn’t just going from a glass is half full to a glass is half empty mindset, but also further imagining a world where the glass has fallen from the table, shattered on the ground, and the water is spilled all around me. I see things in a darker, and more negative light, and further imagine things in an even darker light than that.
For much of my life, I think like most people, but I could be wrong, I wasn’t aware of these mood swings. I assumed my thinking was consistent day-to-day. I imagined my quality of thinking and problem solving was not hampered by what else may be happening internally. Truth be told, I am not sure I even noticed there were “things happening internally.”
And then, I had a child. As good as Talulla eventually got at sleeping through the night, she certainly didn’t start that way. In those early days, experiencing the true torture of sleep deprivation, I found more and more days were dark for me. And this was true at a time that could have and should have been the happiest of my life. I was now a father!
Then a funny thing happened, and it happened enough that I noticed a pattern. On nights she slept well, my days were so much brighter. Obstacles that seemed insurmountable only the day before were now mole hills as I viewed them in a more optimistic light, and more adeptly problem solved around them. This made me more cognizant of my mood swings, while at the same time helping me diagnose what was causing them.
My default is to be optimistic. I was once told by a colleague that when I hear the world “problem” my face lights up, and I can’t wait to jump in to work to solve it. But my default is not my permanent state. What knocks me off kilter most forcefully, commonly, and predictably is a lack of sleep.
All of this led me to a big change in my own life that I think might be helpful to others, and so I share it here.
First, I pause to notice when I am thinking about things differently than I might otherwise do. Knowing I am normally optimistic, if I find myself going to a more negative place, I am now able to mentally step back and ask myself why that is. I do have the added signal of also noticing my physical environment seemingly get darker, which helps. You may not have the same “symptoms,” but understanding what your own mood swings look like for you will help you start to build the ability to notice them when they occur.
Next, once I notice this swing, I very deliberately choose to NOT think about any big issues. In those negative moods I can quickly go to some dark places. This is incredibly unproductive, and unnecessarily painful. No good comes from it. When I successfully notice via step one, I go through the internal conversation of: “Not today, Andrew. Whatever this problem you are starting to worry about is, today is not the day to dig into it. Get a good night’s sleep and revisit tomorrow.”
The third and final step is to revisit the problem I put off. I am not trying to take the approach of an ostrich and bury my head in the sand forever. I still want to understand and deal with the problem at hand, I just want to do it when I am at my best. The reality is that most of the time the problem that seemed so pressing and horrible when I didn’t have enough sleep was all in my head in the first place. There wasn’t even a problem to address. Spinning my wheels on it while sleep deprived would have been a terrible idea.
For those other times where the problem is real, and must be addressed, tackling it after a good night’s sleep enables me to think through it not just from the downside, but also makes me capable of seeing it from the upside as well. This makes me far more effective in dealing with it productively, and that makes all the difference.
I don’t and can’t get a great night of sleep every night. I am pretty sure none of us can. I can’t prevent all mood swings and “down” times. However, noticing what is most likely to trigger them, and minimizing them helps. Noticing when they are happening and limiting the damage from them, psychological and otherwise, helps even more.
What is your own recent life lesson that is currently helping you? I would love to hear from you as together we continue our learning journey that is life.