sterfry wrote:
This weekend I stayed in bed from 2am Saturday morning until 10am Sunday morning, sleeping most of the time. I got up for about one hour to eat. That's about 31 hours straight in bed. Not healthy. I also did this 3 weeks ago.

Sleeping all day isn't unhealthy, it's actually quite healthy.
Sleep is the repair time for both the body and the mind. The body only effectively repairs muscle tissue, tendons, joints, etc. when they aren't being used. The brain is very busy at night, storing your recent memories (dreaming). With a lack of sleep, abilities go down all over the brain. Slower learning, slower reflexes, etc.
If you are getting tired without doing anything to merit getting tired, using it as an escapism, then that can have other issues which should be taken care of. But if you're doing any physical activity, or dealing with any type of long-term healing, or fighting sickness, sleeping for a day or two is quite healthy and normal for animals (humans included).
Random truth: I often stay awake for days at a time, then sleep for a proportionally reasonable number of recuperation hours, e.g. staying awake 36 hours then sleeping for 15, or staying awake for 49 hours then sleeping for 21 hours. Awaking only for brief periods to use the washroom or have a quick snack. Nothing that wakes up my brain, or I can't sleep.
sagan wrote:
Random truth: I can listen to the same song in repeat for the whole day and not care. I probably wont even notice, and I will sing along all the time. I have had people want to punch me because of this...
Random truth: I once listened to the song by Enigma called "Return To Innocence", on a special repeat mode which I set up that would cross-fade the song with itself so there was no noticeable end to the song as it played over and over, trying to get sick of the song. I gave up after listening to it every waking hour for a week straight.
I never did get sick of it. It's a wonderful song, the chanting takes my mind away. Thinking about it makes me want to go play it again now!
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"Efficiency is doing as much as possible, with as little as possible."
-- Raven Morris