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Leon Moss

Oh Blessed Sleep, Where Art Thou?

For seniors, sleep is a whole discussion on its own. It is a love and hate subject and we can talk about it for hours. Here is a short analysis: Sleep is divided into 2 main categories:

•Daytime sleep

•Nighttime sleep 

Daytime sleep is further sub-divided into 2 main categories:

•Planned sleep

•Unplanned sleep 

Nighttime sleep is also subdivided into 3 sections:

•Falling asleep

•Staying asleep

•Waking up 

All seniors will agree that the best of all sleeps is the Unplanned Daytime Sleep, the one that gets you in the coffee lounge, in the armchair at the club, on the couch straight after breakfast, in front of the television set (highly recommended and most popular of all sleeps), in fact anywhere unexpected and at any old time, when you are least expecting it. It comes sneaking around the corner, invisible and silent and carries you off in its soft, gentle arms. It is known by many other names: nap, snooze, doze, siesta and forty-winks.

Nighttime sleep is a different story altogether. It involves other matters such as falling asleep. One gets into bed after a long day, looking forward to a good night’s sleep – and nothing happens. 2 hours later you pad into the den, switch on the TV and that’s goodbye to any kind of sleep. If you do manage to fall asleep there are elements inside your body waiting to sabotage you and issue wake-up calls to get you to the bathroom. When wake up time arrives do you spring out of bed feeling great and refreshed or do you stagger into the kitchen, groping for a cup of coffee to get your blood corpuscles back onto their feet? 

And then there is the last resort – pills to help you sleep. Tried them, loved the sleep, hated them, stopped them and went back to no-sleep mode. Much better.

About the Author
Leon Moss grew up in South Africa and has lived in Israel for 35 years; He is a construction estimator by profession, and has been a freelance writer for the past 10 years, writing odd stories, articles and web content. Leon paints and works hard at being retired. He and his wife live in a retirement home in central Israel.