The Art of Sleeping in Seminars
Through long years of experience, we
have accumulated the following useful set of rules. These should be helpful to
beginning research students. However, we have also observed seasoned veterans
making some of these simple errors. For advanced students, these rules can also
be applied to regular courses.
- Always lean forward, not backward. If you lean backward, your mouth will
fall open and you'll snore.
- Never sit back against a wall. Your head will bang against it, waking the
rest of the audience. (Similar remarks apply to desks.)
- Never sit on a couch. People won't like you sleeping on their shoulders.
Also, couches are against walls (see 2.). An important exception is when you
are alone on the couch, in which case it is preferable to a chair. In that
case you can avoid 2. by leaning to the side.
- Don't bring pencil and paper. They make too much noise dropping on the
floor. You might think you can work during the seminar, but you just wake up
with half-written equations with long angular lines at the end. Erasers are
OK.
- If possible, choose a chair with padding. Plastic and metal chairs also
fall noisely.
- Don't bother wearing sunglasses, or asking questions right after you wake
up. Who do you think you're fooling?
- If you wake up to laughter and everybody is staring at you, probably the
speaker just referred to your work, so take it as a compliment.
- Practice waking up to the sound of silence. That way you can wake up to
the quiet just after the speaker finishes, and avoid being wakened by the
irritating sound of applause. For you deep sleepers, this also avoids the
problem of waking up in an empty seminar room. Don't think using watch alarms
is clever: After the first 30 seconds of the alarm everybody will know anyway.
- Don't get too much sleep the night before a seminar. You'll fall asleep in
the seminar anyway, and when you wake up you'll feel sluggish from getting too
much sleep. For the same reason, don't attend too many seminars in one week.
- If you travel, be careful not to attend the same seminar twice. You'll
sleep through the same parts anyway.
- Older physicists tend to sleep at exactly the same time every seminar. Try
to schedule your nap to not coincide. The speaker should always have at least
one listener awake at all times, especially when he finishes. Nothing is more
embarrassing than to wake up in a full room with no speaker.
- Don't read this paper during a seminar. It will keep you awake, but the
people sitting next to you will want to borrow it and you'll never see it
again.
This is an extract from a paper called How I
Spent My Summer Vacation by V. Gates, Empty Kangaroo, M. Roachcock, and W.C.
Gall.