Six Hours and Forty-Eight Minutes

Cedar Valley News
May 23, 2026
Six Hours and Forty-Eight Minutes
By Aisha Khalid

She is the third name on the list. I have known her for nine years. She teaches eighth-grade history. Her intake form is in her handwriting, with the letters falling away at the ends of words.

She sits carefully, the way a person sits whose back has been telling her something. I ask how she is.

She says, I sleep, technically. I just never wake up rested. I do not know what the difference is.

I let her sit with the sentence. I have learned, in twenty years, the answer arrives faster if the question is allowed to arrive first.

Three years, she says. She has tried melatonin and the rings. She knows her deep sleep percentage, her REM, and her resting heart rate. She wants to know what is wrong with her.

There is probably nothing wrong with her, I say. Her body is doing what bodies do on six hours and forty-eight minutes a night for a long time. Six hours and forty-eight minutes is the average for an American adult, according to Gallup. More than an hour less than the country slept in 1942. She is not the exception. She is the average.

She is quiet a moment. Then she says, almost to herself, she did not know it was so bad.

The cause is not personal failing, I tell her. The experts name stress first; nearly half of Americans report frequent daily stress, the highest in Gallup’s seventy-year trend. Long hours, second. Phones in the bedroom, third. The people sleeping least are young mothers, carrying what nobody else sees.

She laughs at the last one. The first real laugh of the visit. For a moment, the room is different. Two women who both know what carrying-what-nobody-sees feels like, neither of us pretending.

I tell her what closes it. Consistent hours. Morning light soon after waking. A darker, cooler room. Less screen before bed. Less alcohol in the evening.

She stops me at the last one. She does not drink, she says. Well, one glass of wine before bed. To relax. Just the one.

I let the wine sit on the counter between us. I have learned to take this conversation slowly.

This is not a moral question, I tell her. It is a sleep question. The science is firm. Wine helps you fall asleep faster, which is why it feels like it is helping. But it degrades the second half of the night, when deep sleep does the body’s repair work. The wine she has been drinking to sleep has been taking from her exactly the sleep she came in asking for.

She does not speak. I can see her doing the math.

There is something larger, I tell her. Even if she sets the wine down tonight, the standard list is not the whole answer. Her cause is one of the harder ones. The stress. The hours. The cognitive load nobody but her is keeping count of. Something she has been treating as non-negotiable has to come off her list before the body will give back the hour.

She is quiet again. Longer this time.

Then I tell her something I do not always give the woman in this chair. In 2018, a Harvard study followed nurses and other health professionals for 34 years and identified five behaviors. Do not smoke. Keep alcohol low. Maintain a healthy weight. Exercise thirty minutes daily. Eat a healthy diet. People who followed all five lived 12 to 14 years longer, 10 of those years free of diabetes, heart disease, and cancer.

Look at the longevity list, I tell her. Look at the sleep list. They are one list. The wine she drinks tonight is the wine her seventies will charge her for. One ledger. The country has been buying twice.

I do not tell her what to put down. The prescription I write most cautiously is the one for someone else’s habits.

She thanks me and stands. At the door, she turns and asks, quietly, whether anyone ever really does it. I tell her the truth. Some do. The ones who do are the ones who decided the cost was finally too high.

The door closes. I sit for a minute before I call the next name.

Cedar Valley News has a Facebook group. If you have comments and want to join the conversation, you are welcome. Tell us about the night you slept eight hours and how the next day felt. https://bit.ly/40p8jKy

This editorial is part of the fictional Cedar Valley News series, written by Evan Swensen, Publisher, and Claude Marshall, AI Developmental Editor. While the people and town of Cedar Valley are fictional, the Gallup sleep data, the CDC findings, the cited sleep science on alcohol, and the 2018 Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health study on five lifestyle behaviors and longevity referenced in this editorial are real.

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