• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • Home
  • About
  • Donate
  • Start
    • Contact
    • We Need Your Support (Donate)
    • Newsletter Signup
      • Daily
      • Weekly
    • Into the Storm (Hosted by Justin Deschamps)
    • Follow Our Social Media
    • Best Telegram Channels & Groups
    • Discernment 101
    • Media Archive (Shows, Videos, Presentations)
    • Where’s The Hope
  • Browse
    • Editor’s Top Content (Start Here)
    • Best Categories
      • Consciousness
      • Conspiracy
      • Disclosure
      • Extraterrestrials
      • History
      • Health
      • NWO Deep State
      • Philosophy
      • Occult
      • Self Empowerment
      • Spirituality
    • By Author
      • Justin Deschamps
        • Articles
        • Into The Storm (on EdgeofWonder.TV)
        • Awarewolf Radio (Podcast)
      • Adam AstroYogi Sanchez
      • Amber Wheeler
      • Barbara H Whitfield RT and Charles L Whitfield MD
      • Chandra Loveguard
      • Conscious Optimist
      • Marko De Francis
      • Lance Schuttler
        • EMF Harmonized (Cell Phone, Wi-Fi, Radiation Protection
      • Ryan Delarme
      • Will Justice
  • Products
    • EMF Harmonized (Cell Phone, Wi-Fi, Radiation Protection
    • Earth Science & Energy
    • Free Energy
    • AI and Transhumanism
    • Space
    • Nikola Tesla
    • ET
      • Ancient Technology
      • Crop Circles
      • UFOs
    • Conspiracy
      • Anti NWO Deep State
      • Domestic Spying
      • Freemasonry
      • Law & Legal Corruption
      • Mass Mind Control
      • NWO Conspiracy
      • Police State and Censorship
      • Propaganda
      • Snowden Conspiracy
      • Social Engineering
    • Misc.
      • Council on Foreign Relations
      • Music Industry
      • Paranormal
      • Pedagate and Pedophilia
      • Q Anon
      • Secret Space Program
      • White Hat
  • Sign Up
  • Election Fraud
  • Partners
    • EMF Harmonized
    • Ascent Nutrition

Stillness in the Storm

An Agent for Consciousness Evolution

  • Our Story
  • Support Us
  • Contact
  •  Sunday, February 1, 2026
  • Store
  • Our Social
    • BitChute
    • CloutHub
    • Gab
    • Gab TV
    • Gettr
    • MeWe
      • MeWe Group
    • Minds
    • Rumble
    • SubscribeStar
    • Telegram
      • Best Telegram Channels and Groups
    • Twitter (Justin Duchamps)
    • YouTube

How to be Productive When You’re Tired

Sunday, March 15, 2020 By Stillness in the Storm Leave a Comment

Spread the love

(Hugo Huyer) We all have those days when we’d much rather go back to sleep. We may feel tired, exhausted, worn out, fatigued, and no amount of coffee seems to help. But work needs to get done, so how do you increase your productivity when you’re running on an empty tank?

Related Working to the Beat: How Music Can Make Us More Productive

Source – Psych Central

by Hugo Huyer, March 2nd, 2020

If you’re tired, you should rest first and work later, but we all know that sometimes that’s just not an option. Fortunately, you can beat the exhaustion. From power naps to office yoga, there are dozens of simple tips that help you boost your concentration and productivity even when you’re feeling low on energy.

So if you’re looking for some hacks to get through a day at work or school when you’d much rather go to sleep, read on. In this article I’ll be taking a look at how tiredness affects your performance and how to be productive when you’re tired.

The different types of tiredness

As you probably know, not all tiredness is the same. It’s useful to understand the differences between tiredness and fatigue, because they need different approaches when it comes to increasing productivity.

Lack of sleep

The first type of tiredness is the kind that comes from a sleepless night. Whether you were pulling an all-nighter to cram for an exam or trying to get your baby to sleep, you’re going to be paying for it with the loss of productivity the next day.

Research shows that sleep deprivation lowers your cognitive performance, for example:

  • impaired ability to divide attention between multiple tasks;
  • loss of cognitive flexibility or the ability to adapt to changes in events;
  • decrease of self-control and increase of hostility, resulting in increased workplace deviance, for example withholding of effort;
  • inflexible thought processes, less creative problem solving, and poorer judgment;
  • disturbances in memory consolidation and impaired working memory.

These changes in performance already happen after one sleepless night and you probably know what it feels like. Most of us have experienced a sleepless night or two at some point in our lives.

I used to pull all-nighters all the time in high school and university, and I don’t understand how I got anything done. Anything less than 6 hours of sleep now, and I know that my productivity drops drastically. While coffee helps, I never feel at the top of my game after sleepless nights.

Fortunately, sleep deprivation induced tiredness is pretty easy to cure — just make sure you get enough sleep the next night and you should be fine.

Fatigue

The other kind of tiredness is fatigue, and it’s much harder to deal with. By “fatigue”, I mean exhaustion from a prolonged period of excessive stress or activity. For example, the tiredness you might feel after an especially grueling exam session or work week (or month).

The main reason behind this kind of exhaustion is prolonged stress which can lead to burnout. Fatigue can also be caused by physical stressors in the workplace, like noise or temperature that is too hot or too cold.

The effects of fatigue on performance are largely the same as those of sleep deprivation: impaired memory, difficulty with concentration, etc. However, fatigue is also related to mental health problems like depression, which can lead to further loss of productivity.

Other symptoms and effects of fatigue may include:

  • chronic tiredness;
  • irritability and moodiness;
  • impulsivity;
  • physical symptoms like headaches, sore muscles and dizziness;
  • impaired immune system functioning;
  • low motivation.

Unlike an episode of sleep deprivation, fatigue can’t be cured by a good night’s sleep. It requires making some fundamental changes in your lifestyle, like removing a stressor or taking a sick leave to get back on track.

If you are experiencing the symptoms listed above, or if you feel that you’ve been tired for a long time and no amount of sleep is helping, I recommend seeking counseling or therapy to prevent burnout.

Book The More You Do The Better You Feel: How to Overcome Procrastination and Live a Happier Life

How to be productive when tired

If you can’t or don’t want to take a longer break or change up your working habits, or if you just need to get through one workday on a minimal amount of sleep, there are still some things you can do. While they require you to still make some changes, the tricks are surprisingly easy and effective.

1. Accept that you’re human.

You cannot expect peak performance from yourself if your basic needs are unmet. This means that if you haven’t eaten or slept, you won’t be able to put in your best work because you have no energy to fuel you.

By beating yourself up for feeling tired and disoriented, you will lower your productivity even further, because you’re wasting precious cognitive resources on being angry at yourself. If you’re running on 2 hours of sleep, accept that you simply don’t have the energy to do your best work ever— but focus on doing your best with what you’ve got.

2. Eliminate distractions

When we’re tired, our attention span decreases. It’s harder to resist temptations and distractions and focus. This means that you have to make your environment as distraction-free as possible:

  • if you work in an open office where concentration is tricky on the best of days, try working from home or at a library (whichever has fewer distractions);
  • if your work is tied to a certain place, try using noise-cancelling earphones and playing music that keeps you in the zone;
  • pause your inbox and put your phone out of sight if constant notifications keep grabbing your attention;
  • place a “do not disturb” sign on your door or desk to stop co-workers from striking up conversations;
  • clean your desk or workspace and only leave out the items you need to complete your work.

3. Get physical

I know it sounds a little counterproductive — why should you expend precious energy on exercise when work needs to get done? While you’re definitely spending some energy on moving, it also has an invigorating effect.

You don’t have to fit in an entire gym session, just a little stretching or walking will do. The main thing is to stand up and move a little bit. A trip to the watercooler and back every 30 minutes may be enough, but if you have a little more time and space, you can try out some office yoga if you feel like trying something new.

Book Heal the Body, Heal the Mind: A Somatic Approach to Moving Beyond Trauma

4. Take a power nap

The perfect power nap is an elusive thing. You either end up sleeping too little or too long, neither of which will help you. Here’s how to take the perfect nap.

According to a 2010 study, a super short nap of 5-15 minutes will leave you feeling invigorated immediately, but the effects will only last for about 1-3 hours. A nap of 30 minutes and over will leave you feeling a little disoriented at first but the effects will last longer.

In order to fall asleep quickly, try making the room as dark as you can or using a sleep mask.

A 2003 study found that while a 20-minute nap alone is effective, you can reap even more benefits by combining your nap with either washing your face immediately after waking up; exposure to bright light 1 minute after waking; or drinking coffee right before the nap.

The coffee nap was found to be the most effective in increasing the subjects’ performance level and the logic behind it is very simple. When we drink coffee, the caffeine level in our blood peaks about 30 minutes after consuming it. If you take a 20- to 30-minute nap right after drinking coffee, you will wake up just in time for the caffeine to kick in alongside with the effects of sleep.

5. Schedule your breaks

Adults can concentrate for about 20 minutes at a time, and when you’re tired, you can take a couple of minutes off of that estimate. Taking scheduled breaks is important whenever you’re working, but it’s essential to make most of your limited energy when tired.

A great way to schedule your breaks is to use the Pomodoro technique. The classic Pomodoro calls for 25-minute periods of concentration with 5-minute breaks, but you can shorten the time to 20-minutes if you need to. It’s not important how long the periods of work and pauses are, as long as they are regular.

Make sure to set a timer for yourself and try to move during your break. Just standing up and stretching for two minutes is enough to restart your brain and concentration. But make sure that you don’t let your break stretch on for too long!

Wrapping up

We all get tired sometimes. Whether it’s from a sleepless night or a longer period of stress, tiredness will affect your performance, and it’s not fair to expect yourself to be at the top of your game with less energy. You can still try your best while working with what you have, you just have to divide your brain power a little differently. But these tips will only take you so far — if tiredness persists, it’s better to take a break and recover before getting back to work.

Stillness in the Storm Editor: Why did we post this?

Psychology is the study of the nature of mind. Philosophy is the use of that mind in life. Both are critically important to gain an understanding of as they are aspects of the self. All you do and experience will pass through these gateways of being. The preceding information provides an overview of this self-knowledge, offering points to consider that people often don’t take the time to contemplate. With the choice to gain self-awareness, one can begin to see how their being works. With the wisdom of self-awareness, one has the tools to master their being and life in general, bringing order to chaos through navigating the challenges with the capacity for right action.

– Justin

Not sure how to make sense of this? Want to learn how to discern like a pro? Read this essential guide to discernment, analysis of claims, and understanding the truth in a world of deception: 4 Key Steps of Discernment – Advanced Truth-Seeking Tools.


Stillness in the Storm Editor’s note: Did you find a spelling error or grammatical mistake? Send an email to [email protected], with the error and suggested correction, along with the headline and url. Do you think this article needs an update? Or do you just have some feedback? Send us an email at [email protected]. Thank you for reading.

Source:

https://psychcentral.com/lib/how-to-be-productive-when-youre-tired/

Filed Under: Health, How To, Psychology, Self Empowerment, Uncategorized Tagged With: how to, productivity, psych central, psychology, sleep

Notices and Disclaimers

We need $2000 per month to pay our costs. Help us one time or recurring. (DONATE HERE)

To sign up for RSS updates, paste this link (https://stillnessinthestorm.com/feed/) into the search field of your preferred RSS Reader or Service (such as Feedly or gReader).

Subscribe to Stillness in the Storm Newsletter

“It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it.” – Aristotle

This website is supported by readers like you.

If you find our work of value, consider making a donation. 

Stillness in the Storm DISCLAIMER: All articles, videos, statements, claims, views and opinions that appear anywhere on this site, whether stated as theories or absolute facts, are always presented by Stillness in the Storm as unverified—and should be personally fact checked and discerned by you, the reader. Any opinions or statements herein presented are not necessarily promoted, endorsed, or agreed to by Stillness, those who work with Stillness, or those who read Stillness. Any belief or conclusion gleaned from content on this site is solely the responsibility of you the reader to substantiate, fact check, and no harm comes to you or those around you. And any actions taken by those who read material on this site is solely the responsibility of the acting party. You are encouraged to think carefully and do your own research. Nothing on this site is meant to be believed without question or personal appraisal.

Content Disclaimer: All content on this site marked with “source – [enter website name and url]” is not owned by Stillness in the Storm. All content on this site that is not originally written, created, or posted as original, is owned by the original content creators, who retain exclusive jurisdiction of all intellectual property rights. Any copyrighted material on this site was shared in good faith, under fair use or creative commons. Any request to remove copyrighted material will be honored, provided proof of ownership is rendered. Send takedown requests to [email protected].

What is our mission? Why do we post what we do?

Our mission here is to curate (share) articles and information that we feel is important for the evolution of consciousness. Most of that information is written or produced by other people and organizations, which means it does not represent our views or opinions as managing staff of Stillness in the Storm. Some of the content is written by one of our writers and is clearly marked accordingly. Just because we share a CNN story that speaks badly about the President doesn’t mean we’re promoting anti-POTUS views. We’re reporting on the fact as it was reported, and that this event is important for us to know so we can better contend with the challenges of gaining freedom and prosperity. Similarly, just because we share a pro/anti-[insert issue or topic] content, such as a pro-second amendment piece or an anti-military video doesn’t mean we endorse what is said. Again, information is shared on this site for the purpose of evolving consciousness. In our opinion, consciousness evolves through the process of accumulating knowledge of the truth and contemplating that knowledge to distill wisdom and improve life by discovering and incorporating holistic values. Thus, sharing information from many different sources, with many different perspectives is the best way to maximize evolution. What’s more, the mastery of mind and discernment doesn’t occur in a vacuum, it is much like the immune system, it needs regular exposure to new things to stay healthy and strong. If you have any questions as to our mission or methods please reach out to us at [email protected].

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Primary Sidebar

Search Our Archives

FUNDRAISER!

Latest Videos

Guarding Against Bio Tech and EMF - Fix The World Project | Just In Stillness

From around the web

News “they” don’t want you to see

Newsletter

You can unsubscribe anytime. For more details, review our Privacy Policy.

Thank you!

You have successfully joined our subscriber list.

.

We Need Your Support

Support our work!

Weekly Newsletter Sign UP

Only want to see emails once a week? Sign up for the Weekly Newsletter here: SIGN UP. (Make sure you send an email to [email protected] to confirm the change or it won’t work).

Latest Videos

Footer

  • Menus
  • Internship Program
  • RSS
  • Social Media
  • Media
  • Privacy Policy

Copyright © 2026 · Privacy Policy · Log in · Built by

This website wouldn't be the same without the ethical web hosting provided by Modern Masters. Modern Masters ethically serves small businesses in metaphysical, paranormal, healing, spirituality, homesteading, acupuncture and other related fields. Get the perfect website for your sacred work at Modern Masters.