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During his power naps, Tesla would enter deep sleep almost instantly. This wasn't random - it was a trained response. His brain learned to compress hours of rest into minutes, maximizing every second of sleep. The secret was in the timing...

160,630 views • 1 year ago •via X (Twitter)

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samyr qureshi's profile picture
samyr qureshi1 year ago

Everyone’s obsessed with getting 8 hours of sleep. But Nikola Tesla ran on just 2 hours/night––and became one of the greatest inventors of all time using this routine. Now, research finally shows why it worked (and why you should never try it): 🧵

samyr qureshi's profile picture
samyr qureshi1 year ago

Tesla wasn't just any inventor. He gave us AC electricity, radio technology, and wireless power. His mind was so sharp, he could visualize entire machines in 3D and test them mentally before building them. But his genius came at a cost...

samyr qureshi's profile picture
samyr qureshi1 year ago

His professors warned him about his extreme habits. He'd work 84 hours straight without rest, pushing himself to mental breakdowns. Yet he maintained this intense schedule for decades, powered by an unconventional sleep pattern that would shock modern health experts:

samyr qureshi's profile picture
samyr qureshi1 year ago

Tesla followed what we now call the "Uberman Sleep Cycle": 6 precise 20-minute naps, spaced exactly 4 hours apart. Total sleep time? Just 2 hours per day. This gave him nearly 22 hours of wakefulness while others only had 16. But here's where it gets interesting...

samyr qureshi's profile picture
samyr qureshi1 year ago

By spacing his naps exactly 4 hours apart, Tesla synchronized with his body's natural ultradian rhythm. This is the 90-120 minute cycle where your brain alternates between high and low alertness. He'd nap at the low points, making each 20-minute rest more effective than hours of normal sleep.

samyr qureshi's profile picture
samyr qureshi1 year ago

But Tesla wasn't alone. Leonardo da Vinci used a similar technique: 15-minute naps every 4 hours. And Thomas Edison swore by strategic power naps, often falling asleep in his lab chair between experiments. These geniuses understood something we're just now rediscovering:

samyr qureshi's profile picture
samyr qureshi1 year ago

Sleep isn't just about quantity - it's about timing. Tesla's naps were precisely scheduled to coincide with his brain's natural rest periods. This allowed him to enter REM sleep almost immediately, something that usually takes 90 minutes for most people. But there was a dark side...

samyr qureshi's profile picture
samyr qureshi1 year ago

The constant sleep deprivation took its toll. Tesla suffered multiple nervous breakdowns. His health deteriorated. His obsession with work and minimal sleep likely contributed to his increasing eccentricity in later years. Modern science has revealed why:

samyr qureshi's profile picture
samyr qureshi1 year ago

This extreme sleep pattern disrupts: • Growth hormone production • Memory consolidation • Circadian rhythms • Immune function Tesla's superhuman schedule came at a devastating cost to his health. Yet his experiment taught us something valuable:

samyr qureshi's profile picture
samyr qureshi1 year ago

The body can adapt to almost anything. But just because it can, doesn't mean it should. Tesla's 2-hour sleep schedule worked for him - until it didn't. The lesson?

samyr qureshi's profile picture
samyr qureshi1 year ago

Sleep isn't one-size-fits-all. While we can learn from Tesla's experiment, copying it exactly would be dangerous. Instead, focus on understanding your own sleep rhythms and working with them, not against them. Your body will thank you.

samyr qureshi's profile picture
samyr qureshi1 year ago

I hope you've found this thread helpful. Follow me @samyr_q for more. Like/Repost the quote below if you can:

samyr qureshi's profile picture
samyr qureshi1 year ago

I'm Samyr—ex-Apple & Gartner Now founder of Knack - edtech modernizing p2p student support VP at Deep Acre - investing in new fund managers & founders I write about startups, leadership, & risk-taking Empowering 1st-time & immigrant founders to build world-changing firms 🔥

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Khalid Umar1 year ago

@threadreaderapp unroll

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Thread Reader App1 year ago

@samyr_q @ukilaw Saluti, please find the unroll here: See you soon. 🤖

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