Difference between revisions of "E5"

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Revision as of 22:44, 4 December 2020

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This is an unadvisable schedule, as its total sleep time is considered to be below the bare minimum required for most people.

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E5
Everyman 5
chart link

Total sleep3 hours 10 minutes
Proposed byPuredoxyk
DifficultyExtremely hard
Specification1 core and 5 naps around the day in a Uberman configuration
Former namesEveryman 1.5

</translate> Everyman 5, or E5, is the last schedule in the Everyman series. It was also proposed by Puredoxyk in her book Ubersleep, as part of the Formula where an Everyman variant is expected to have 4-5 naps per day if the core lasts for 1.5h. As the last schedule, E5's core is reduced to the very minimum duration for a core, and it has the most number of naps out of all Everyman schedules (5 naps per day). Because of the total sleep of only more than 3 hours, it is considered the last Everyman schedule before one can transition to Uberman sleep (2h total sleep). This schedule's total sleep is below the minimum threshold for long-term sustenance (~4h total sleep), and should not be attempted by average sleepers.

Mechanism

E5 is similar in structure as other Everyman schedules, having 1 core sleep and more than one nap. However, similar to E4, E5 can create an impression of a nap-only schedule, as the core only has 1-cycle duration, and a 90m duration is often mistaken for a nap outside of polyphasic sleep's context. Despite Puredoxyk's proposal of the schedule, she did not mention any details about how to optimally schedule it. Until recently, the Polyphasic Discord Community proposed it as a way to transition to Uberman, because it also has 6 sleeps per day, and the core will be reduced to a nap.

The core will contain the bulk of SWS, and the naps will relieve REM pressure and sustain alertness. They are spread throughout the day, looking somewhat equidistant from one another to resemble Uberman sleep (~3-4h wake between each sleep). Because of having a plethora number of naps, one nap is located in the middle of the graveyard hours. This makes the adaptation to this schedule by itself, or even just a temporary transition a very sophisticated process. As core body temperature drops around nighttime hours, where sleep is facilitated, core sleeps are preferred over short naps. It is expected that SWS likely will enter this nap in the case of normal SWS requirements. The latest nap in the day, located around late afternoon/early evening hours (~6 PM) may also contain SWS because of the high sleep pressure formed by the very low total sleep. After adaptation is completed, presumably the core cycle length can reduce to ~60m because of the high frequency of naps that contain REM sleep and mostly SWS and traces of light sleep go into the lone core.

Adaptation

For the most part, E5 adaptation is similar to E4, if not more intense. The core sleep cannot support a regular amount of SWS requirements (~90m), and when vital sleep is repartitioned into each sleep block, any naps in the day can generate SWS wakes. Once REM pressure builds up, adapters will have to manage the intense sleep inertia from each REM wake. Long crashes can occur frequently during adaptation due to SWS wakes, and stage 3 is expected to arrive only a couple days in, because of a gargantuan sleep reduction from an average monophasic baseline (8h).

With the high density of sleep across the day, initially it will be difficult to fall asleep in many naps in a row, as on any other polyphasic schedules for beginners/non-nappers. Then, this would increase the chance to oversleep in the late nap in the day, or the core sleep the following day(s). Despite having 20m of extra sleep compared to E4, the extra nap only serves to somewhat provide more alertness, and as adaptation progresses, this extra nap can become a liability (an extra opportunity for a nasty SWS wake). Any oversleeps would endanger the adaptation in a much greater magnitude than on schedules with higher total sleep, because it is mandatory to overcome the equilibrium of SWS and REM sleep in each sleep block to be able to adapt.

Even though Puredoxyk suggested that this Everyman variant is possible, she actually never attempted it. Adaptations to this schedule since then are also extremely rare, and no one has ever been able to adapt to it. All attempts were swiftly blown by the intensified sleep pressure from the schedule, and oversleeps uncontrollably tear the schedule apart. For this reason, it may be better to stay on E5 for a short amount of time, before making an immediate transition to Uberman (fast adaptation), to limit as much built-up sleep deprivation as possible. However, no successful Uberman sleepers are known to have transitioned from E5 either.

Alternate Variants

Non-equidistant E5

This variant is simply based on the possibility to succeed to this schedule through non-equidistant scheduling. Since Puredoxyk never mentioned the optimal scheduling, it is possible that non-equidistant scheduling deserves an attempt. More naps are moved into the nighttime hours to have fewer naps during the day, and it is usually easier to be awake and alert during daytime hours (which means fewer naps are needed). Regardless, more attempts at either variants are needed to determine if E5 is truly an adaptable schedule.

Lifestyle Considerations

With an excessive amount of naps spread throughout the day, E5 renders social commitments, extracurricular activities and standard occupations (e.g, 9-to-5) largely impossible. It is also very inconvenient to have to go back to bed once after ~1.5-2h at night, should the naps be scheduled closer together at night. The immense difficulty in adapting to this schedule alone is not worth an attempt - as a standalone schedule (excluding the transitional role to Uberman), E5 generally has poor design of sleeps and is outclassed by E4, which has some successes over the years, with the more reasonable homeostatic distance of wake hours between each sleep.

Like any other schedules below the minimum sleep threshold, E5 also poses long-term health issues, potentially. It is also largely unknown if E5 will ever gather the needed amounts of attempts due to its highly constrained scheduling. One small niche that it can offer, like DC4, is that one can choose to have a short core sleep for some SWS, and then enjoy the several naps on E5 as a way to learn to nap effectively. This can be considered a less extreme Naptation version, which allows for certain leeway in conserving some amount of daytime productivity. The core sleep with some SWS can help consolidate memory and power up overall performance better than skipping sleep entirely. In an emergency that requires a lot of sleep cut, E5 can be used as a temporary schedule with several naps to boost alertness. The short naps have their advantage of being easier to fit into daily schedule, and allow sustained operations where no core sleeps can be scheduled.

Being a middle ground between the ultimate Uberman and a more sustainable E3, or even E4-extended, E5 has the worst of all worlds. It is almost as inflexible as Uberman and the likes of E4, while also potentially unsustainable long-term as total sleep is not high enough for an average population to attempt (which loses to E3). Beginners and average polyphasic sleepers should not try to adapt to this schedule aside from using it for some niche situations above.

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