Now
I know that many long-distance sailors, particularly singlehanders, somehow
manage to get by with many short snatches of sleep. Often they sleep for only
20 minutes and then get up to have a look around the horizon.
But
psychologist Dr. Glin Bennet, who interviewed competitors in a singlehanded
race across the North Atlantic, discovered that 50 percent of them experienced
one or more illusions or hallucinations.
I
remember Frank Robb telling me of his experience. Frank was an intrepid seaman,
a fisherman and a sailboat owner who learned his lessons in the stormy waters
of the Cape of Good Hope, and who sometimes voyaged rather farther afield.
He
was once singlehanding in his old gaffer when he encountered four days of rough
weather in the Caribbean. As usual, he was deprived of wholesome sleep during
that time, and when the storm subsided he wasn’t too sure of his position. But
soon he spotted a fishing boat, and, in the distance, an island with a
protected harbor.
He
sailed in, waving to a launch crowded with sightseers, and found a good
anchorage. With the last of his energy he lowered his anchor and went down
below, where he passed out on the saloon floor.
Twelve
hours later he woke up and went on deck. There was no land in sight, There were
no boats around. Nothing but sea. The anchor was down, however, dangling
uselessly at the end of a mere eight fathoms of rode.
Luckily,
he felt no anxiety about his hallucination. He realized that sleep deprivation
had affected his judgment, and that his overtired mind had invented the island
to relieve him of the anxiety that was preventing him from getting healing
sleep.
We
now know that dreams are important. Fatigue affects you mentally as well as
physically. It’s dangerous. And if storms prevent you from dreaming, your mind
will eventually compensate with a parade of waking dreams called
hallucinations. The good news is that hallucinations leave no permanent bad
effects on the mind, so there is nothing to be frightened of. To prevent hallucinations, it seems, you need
an occasional uninterrupted sleep of six hours or more. And that’s not
something that can ever be guaranteed for a singlehander.
Today’s Thought
Dreams are true while they last, and
do we not live in dreams?
—
Tennyson, The Higher Pantheism
Tailpiece
“Boy
we had some excitement at our place last night. We had a burglar in the house.
You should have seen my husband coming down the stairs three at a time!”
“Did
he catch the burglar?”
“Hell
no, the burglar was upstairs.”
(Drop by every Monday,
Wednesday, Friday for another Mainly about Boats column.)
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