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How to get ahead? Buy an office bed

About the time when my children learnt to sleep through the night, I lost the knack. Waking up tired is one of the quiet horrors of middle age. I’ve recently become addicted to my Fitbit watch, which tracks sleep, and my new first-thing ritual is to scan the dismal numbers from the night before: the hour-plus awake, the preponderance of light sleep and the struggle to reach seven hours.

Fitbit (I’ve come to think of him as a friend) offers benchmarks to reassure me that all this is pretty typical for my peer group. By middle age, we have fewer deep-sleep brain waves, more body pain and weaker bladders, explains Matthew Walker, a sleep expert at the University of California, Berkeley. Victor Horta, the great Brussels architect of art nouveau, seems to have been so plagued by night-time toilet trips that he built a urinal into his bedside wardrobe.

Old people sleep even worse but they generally have more time to spend trying, which might explain why 45- to 54-year-olds emerged as “the most sleep-deprived age group” in a survey of 5,007 Britons for the UK’s Sleep Council in 2013.

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西蒙•库柏

西蒙•库柏(Simon Kuper)1994年加入英国《金融时报》,在1998年离开FT之前,他撰写一个每日更新的货币专栏。2002年,他作为体育专栏作家重新加入FT,一直至今。如今,他为FT周末版杂志撰写一个话题广泛的专栏。

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