The thing with Junkies is that they either hit bottom and seek help, or they continue to spiral down to the point of self-destruction. Not being able to acknowledge any power higher than themselves will doom them to the latter. When that happens, they will not be able to believe how lightning-fast everything for which they are working will come crashing down on their heads.“…Behind the scenes, it was even worse. The night before Obama announced the administration’s housing plan on Feb. 18 in Arizona, Sperling e-mailed the final documents at 3 a.m. and asked for comments. Five people responded immediately.
Martin Moore-Ede, a former Harvard University professor, calls it the “iron man” syndrome and says the American political workplace is one of the few that still resists a mechanism for ensuring people get rest.
One study conducted for the British Parliament found that “mental fatigue affects cognitive performance, leading to errors of judgement, microsleeps (lasting for seconds or minutes), mood swings and poor motivation.” The effect, it found, is equal to a blood alcohol level of .10 percent — above the legal limit to drive in the United States.
Obama administration officials, and their predecessors, shrug off such warnings, citing the adrenaline rush. They insist that their bodies have grown strangely accustomed to the rhythms of the job. But they acknowledge that the routine in the White House is more grueling than most had anticipated.
The staff is beginning to take a few breaks. One deputy press secretary found time to get away to Hawaii for a few days. Gibbs went to his high school reunion in Alabama, the first weekend away that he can remember.
But, he says, it is not enough.
“You go down to the mess. You have your coffee at five in the afternoon, and it just doesn’t do anything,” Gibbs lamented. “Because you realize you’re so far behind [in sleep] that a jolt — you don’t even feel it.”
FULL SPECTRUM CULTURE
By the grace of God, seeing life in color since 2003.
In West Wing: Grueling Schedules, Bleary Eyes — Michael D. Shear, Washington Post
Adrenaline-junkie behavior is rampant in the current occupant of the White House and his staff:
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