Is there a legit way to sleep for 24 hours or more?

wasted

wasted

youngmaxxing - looxpilled
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no trol u fuken sphumans
 
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Medically induced coma. Risk of accidental brain damage.
Overdosing on sleep meds. Risk of accidental suicide.
 
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Medically induced coma. Risk of accidental brain damage.
Overdosing on sleep meds. Risk of accidental suicide.
What are the negative effects?
 
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Ι managed to sleep for 17 hours after being awake for around 41 hours once. Why would you need to sleep 24 hours though?
 
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rope
 
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Would be nice.

I'm just.... tired.. of everything and everyone
Sleeping won't fix that buddy boyo. No amount of time will fix human nature. Learn to cope and remember, a cope a day keeps the rope away. :feelsokman:
 
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just kys theory
 
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@Chad1212
 
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No.
 
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Be exhausted theory
 
Hibernation, apparently some humans can hibernate too:
A Practice closely akin to hibernation is said to be general among Russian peasants in the Pskov Government, where food is scanty to a degree almost equivalent to chronic famine. Not having provisions enough to carry them through the whole year, they adopt the economical expedient of spending one half of it in sleep. This custom has existed among them from time immemorial. At the first fall of snow the whole family gathers round the stove, lies down, ceases to wrestle with the problems of human existence, and quietly goes to sleep. Once a day every one wakes up to eat a piece of hard bread, of which an amount sufficient to last six months has providently been baked in the previous autumn. When the bread has been washed down with a draught of water, everyone goes to sleep again. The members of the family take it in turn to watch and keep the fire alight. After six months of this reposeful existence the family wakes up, shakes itself, goes out to see if the grass is growing, and by-and-by sets to work at summer tasks.
 
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Only with anesthesia but it is not safe and you won't have access to the substances.
You could try taking huge doses of melatonin every time you wake up, that might work.
 
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Kind of, I do 15miles a day and I used to sleep for 13hrs each day. I started taking muscle relaxers so now I sleep 6hrs but thats another story.
 
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ofc bro. You get a shotgun and point it on your palate and shoot. You'll sleep for approximately forever.
 
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Hibernation, apparently some humans can hibernate too:
A Practice closely akin to hibernation is said to be general among Russian peasants in the Pskov Government, where food is scanty to a degree almost equivalent to chronic famine. Not having provisions enough to carry them through the whole year, they adopt the economical expedient of spending one half of it in sleep. This custom has existed among them from time immemorial. At the first fall of snow the whole family gathers round the stove, lies down, ceases to wrestle with the problems of human existence, and quietly goes to sleep. Once a day every one wakes up to eat a piece of hard bread, of which an amount sufficient to last six months has providently been baked in the previous autumn. When the bread has been washed down with a draught of water, everyone goes to sleep again. The members of the family take it in turn to watch and keep the fire alight. After six months of this reposeful existence the family wakes up, shakes itself, goes out to see if the grass is growing, and by-and-by sets to work at summer tasks.





There are no known cases of natural human hibernation, according to Drew. But she has heard anecdotes about hibernation-like experiences in her research, including the practice of "lotska," in which Russian peasants a century ago would supposedly endure the harsh winter by awaking only once per day for 6 months to consume a small amount of bread and ale. Harvard University cardiologist Herbert Benson has also chronicled Buddhist monks who were able to lower their metabolism by 64 percent through certain meditation techniques.


Currently, however, Spaceworks is looking into techniques already being used in medicine, namely therapeutic hypothermia. First used medically more than 70 years ago, this technique involves cooling a person's body to near the freezing point of water (32 degrees F) to slow their cellular and brain functions. This technique can protect a patient's tissues from damage due to lack of oxygen or blood, usually after a heart attack or surgery such as a heart transplant. (Note: this should not be confused with the trend of cryotherapy, which has little scientific backing and has been linked to several deaths.)


While therapeutic hypothermia is usually used for periods of a day or two, Spaceworks president John Bradford notes that a woman in China was kept chilled for two weeks to allow her brain to heal from a traumatic injury. She recovered fully and returned to her daily life. But no other use of therapeutic hypothermia at that length or longer has been recorded, so it remains unclear how long the technique can be used safely.


Bradford envisions putting people into weeks-long increments of hibernation using body and brain-cooling techniques similar to therapeutic hypothermia to conserve space and resources for large-scale trips to Mars. "It's closer to reality than it sounds, but there's still a lot of questions, and a lot of development that needs to occur," Bradford told Popular Science
 
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There are no known cases of natural human hibernation, according to Drew. But she has heard anecdotes about hibernation-like experiences in her research, including the practice of "lotska," in which Russian peasants a century ago would supposedly endure the harsh winter by awaking only once per day for 6 months to consume a small amount of bread and ale. Harvard University cardiologist Herbert Benson has also chronicled Buddhist monks who were able to lower their metabolism by 64 percent through certain meditation techniques.


Currently, however, Spaceworks is looking into techniques already being used in medicine, namely therapeutic hypothermia. First used medically more than 70 years ago, this technique involves cooling a person's body to near the freezing point of water (32 degrees F) to slow their cellular and brain functions. This technique can protect a patient's tissues from damage due to lack of oxygen or blood, usually after a heart attack or surgery such as a heart transplant. (Note: this should not be confused with the trend of cryotherapy, which has little scientific backing and has been linked to several deaths.)


While therapeutic hypothermia is usually used for periods of a day or two, Spaceworks president John Bradford notes that a woman in China was kept chilled for two weeks to allow her brain to heal from a traumatic injury. She recovered fully and returned to her daily life. But no other use of therapeutic hypothermia at that length or longer has been recorded, so it remains unclear how long the technique can be used safely.


Bradford envisions putting people into weeks-long increments of hibernation using body and brain-cooling techniques similar to therapeutic hypothermia to conserve space and resources for large-scale trips to Mars. "It's closer to reality than it sounds, but there's still a lot of questions, and a lot of development that needs to occur," Bradford told Popular Science

how did you tag me?
 
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Valium
 
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try secobarbital sleepycel
 
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