January 29,
2014
Written by
Maximus Peperkamp, M.S. Verbal Behaviorist
Dear Reader,
Words that
are written as a function of a lack of sleep are very different than those
which were written after a good night sleep. This author experienced this
difference because he was recently having some problems sleeping. Luckily,
these problems went away again. Since he writes almost every day, he noticed
the difference and thought it is worth mentioning and to further explore in
this writing. Readers probably have no clue what kind of words are written by
insomniacs or by writers that are well-rested. This writer, who was last night having
a good and long sleep, thinks that different words come from this rejuvenating
experience. Also, he thinks that the nonverbal behavior of the writer leads to
different verbal arrangements. In the case of a sleep-deprived writer,
sentences will look very different. They may be more dragged out or perhaps unfriendly
and short, because there is not enough energy available to produce them. There
will be some kind of complaint or strain in such writing. A well-rested writer,
by contrast, produces sentences which flow and are easier to read. The
nonverbal experience of the latter is pleasant, while the nonverbal experience
of the former is one of torment and suffering.
If people who
are tired are generally not very good communicators then writers who are tired
are probably not very good writers either. Tired writers wear out their
readers like tired speakers do. That this goes unnoticed is because few
know the symptoms of tired writing. These symptoms are easier to be recognized
in spoken communication. Also in speaking we are not in the habit of doing this.
Few people have any sense of how much talk is a function of a lack
of sleep. Obviously, such talk is negative, because it is based on an
unfulfilled need. Such talk is often demanding and challenging, because it
represents a request which no listener can fulfill. Besides, writing may become
the insomniac’s way of coping with his or her inability to sleep. Those who are used
to reading before going to sleep may pick up on the insomnia of the authors,
who without anyone noticing it induce their insomnia on their readers. Sleepy-deprived
speakers make sleepy listeners and sleepless writers make sleepless readers.
Moreover, people who are tired are more likely to pretend that they are not tired than people
who are rested are likely to pretend that they are tired. Pretentious writing and speaking is always based on the claim: I am not tired and I am alive.
It is easy to
see how Noxious Verbal Behavior (NVB) is determined by physiological states
which have to do with the inability to relax. Sound Verbal Behavior (SVB), by
contrast, is fresh and lively and has nothing to pretend. The verbal output of
insomniacs has to be much higher than the number of words spoken by those who
had a good night’s rest. Hyper-verbal behavior signifies how tense and
stressed NVB communicators are. If we can’t relax with their words, neither can
they. In NVB the words are more important than the nonverbal experiences we have. During NVB the nonverbal
experience doesn’t seem to exist and if it exists it is only addressed in order to make us fixate
on the verbal. The disconnect between verbal and nonverbal is part of our lack of
sleep. More and better sleep results in more and better communication and
writing would follow that trend.
What many
people don’t know is that most of what is written is written by people who are
up at night. The more people are busy with written communication, the less they
sleep. However, the more they are involved in spoken communication, in actual human
relationship, the better they will sleep. We seem to have completely forgotten
that nothing enhances sleep more than a good conversation. In SVB, things are
said in such a way that the verbal and the nonverbal are aligned. When there is day in
day out no alignment between our verbal and nonverbal behavior, this may cause sleeping problems. And, there are many other problems too, but today's writing
focuses only on sleep. In our sleep we ideally completely forget anything verbal.
Dreamless sleep is so beneficial to us because we retreat into the nonverbal realm of
existence. Our inability to sleep is based on our addiction to the verbal. We
can’t let go of all our thoughts, because we have no sense of our body. What we
read is not helping us remember our body. Most texts disconnect us from our
body. To read we must pretend as if we don't have a body. We disembody ourselves
while we read, because we are already used to disembodying ourselves while we
speak. Most writing and speaking makes readers and listeners dissociate from
their body, from the immediate reality. Escape from the environment, by means of
our verbiage, is causing us many problems, which also prevent us from sleeping. To sleep, we must return to our nonverbal environment. Without this return we can’t sleep.
We can’t sleep when our words take us away from our nonverbal environment. In NVB the verbal
excludes the nonverbal. In SVB the verbal is staying connected
with the nonverbal. In SVB the verbal articulates the nonverbal in such a way
that our nonverbal connection continues. In NVB the nonverbal connection is
neglected, ignored and abandoned. NVB writers produce NVB writings, which produce
NVB readers, who will have sleep problems.