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| La méridienne, Vincent van Gogh (1889) |
My father-in-law is a German journalist who still writes, well into his retirement. He may owe his energy, and the fact that he still writes well too, to a remarkable ability: he flops down on his couch in the afternoon, closes his eyes for fifteen minutes, and then gets up refreshed and alert, ready to rise in the trailing wind of ideas. He has done this throughout his professional life, and swears by it. He calls it a Nickerchen; my French friends in the south talk about a méridienne(title of a familiar 1889 painting by Van Gogh of two peasants lazing in the lee of the haystack), whereas in English we take a nap, or the curious forty winks.
| High noon in the village of Entrecasteaux Photo Credit: Cornelia Paeslack |
Siesta is the universal word—from the Latin sexta: the sixth hour for sundial users—though it’s perhaps rather exotic-sounding under a northern European sky. And while I’ve tried to acquire my father-in-law’s clandestine ability of catching forty winks myself, my mind either remains on full alert or if closing down closes down for the day. I’m not a homo siestus, except perhaps on holiday in the south of France , when the sun, from midday to about 4 o’clock in the afternoon, drums on the shutters of the village of E--- , population 512 (+4). Across the river the cicadas endlessly chirrup a line from Virgil—Sole sub ardenti resonant arbusta cicadis(“Under the burning sun the orchard hums with cicadas”)—as their midday report to the Muses, and a lizard on the brickwork tries to teach me the sign-language which, as Heinrich Heine observed on his travels in Lucca, makes it possible even for poets to converse with mute nature.
A siesta frees us, as the Spanish poet Antonio Machadoput it, from the omnipresence of the world.
In Greek times, Hippocrates thought that sleeping after a meal moistened and propelled the food to all parts of the body; and Hippocrates’ prestige was such that we still remember his recipes. The best-known classical siesta-taker was the cynic philosopher Diogenes, who is remembered by everyone because he lived in a tub. He was famously rude to Alexander the Great because the upstart emperor, who also happened to be Aristotle’s most famous pupil, dared disturb him during his tub-nap in ![]() |
| Le temps d'un songe Photo Credit: Mary Gillies |
What is really at issue is the notion of leisure, which for us has an escapist ring to it: for the Greeks, leisure was a wholly positive term (and it is telling that the Greek word for leisure has given us the word ‘school’): leisure was when people undertook activities for their own sake. Only busybodies were destitute of leisure.
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| Still from the 1936 film Modern Times starring Charlie Chaplin |
Compare that attitude to the time-and-motion studies of the American F. W. Taylor which swept across a Europe producing armaments as hard as it could during the First World War, where the methods of trench organisation were noted for future reference by the young Walt Disney and Ray Kroc, the founder of McDonalds. ‘You give in to the noise like you give in to war,’ wrote the French doctor and novelist Louis-Ferdinand Céline after a fact-finding mission to the Ford factory in Detroit for the League of Nations; he thought Chaplin in his film Modern Times had caught all the frantic cretinization of work on the assembly line (even though the film was a silent one). Having discovered how to manipulate matter, the second industrial revolution put its mind to managing humans. Fat chance of a siesta when a foreman had to drill the monotony of the assembly line into his workers! It was the machine that counted, and the machine never slept. Work became precisely quantified as output: time to produce one item. Yet assimilating time to money is a relatively new concept in the history of the human race: we act as if time were a valuable commodity, therefore we consider it must be so. Difficult then to imagine that cultures still exist, even today, where nobody runs out of it, has to set some aside (e.g. for a siesta) or is ever compelled to live on the borrowed variety.
The curious thing is, as the philosopher G. C. Lichtenberg said, long before the industrial revolution came to his home town of Göttingen : “People who never have time accomplish the least.”
| Village of Entrecasteaux Photo Credit: Cornelia Paeslack |
Now, as we hurtle into the third industrial revolution, one seemingly bent on changing the nature of reality itself, the siesta’s slightly furtive moment of hunter-gatherer repose has been rediscovered—by Americans. Being an aspiration as much as a country, America lives in thrall to the idea of tomorrow, and is rather gnostic about today: this is called the work ethic. It is still true, as sociologists have observed over the years, that although the United States is one of the most affluent countries in the world Americans remain poor in terms of leisure (where the typical holiday allowance is a paltry two weeks, and some companies like Microsoft frown on employees ever “taking their foot off the gas”). Put your time to good use, as the saying goes. A balance sheet is clearly implied.
| Village of Entrecasteaux Photo Credit: Cornelia Paeslack |
It might seem a bit odd then that an American World Nap Association (WNO) can now be found on the net.* It is apologetic about what it promotes, pointing out that for most Americans napping is still tainted by Sloth, one of the seven deadly sins. Roget’s Thesaurus—now transatlantically compiled—categorises the word along with “indolence, inactivity, loafing, procrastination, lethargy, slouching, vegetating,” none of them exactly glowing recommendations. Not being busy is, for the puritan mind, the very source of vice: leisure, for the other-regarding egalitarian mind, smacks of privilege. I now read that American creative management, which is paid a great deal of money to have bright ideas, has just had a brainwave: why not get workers to have a pause in the middle of the day? Gould Evans architects’ office in Kansas City , for instance, has just installed a napping loft for its employees to combat the performance dip between 2 and 4 pm. They’ve got it wrong though, especially with the term “power nap.” Impose a siesta on people and you destroy the reason for having one at all.
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| Vue plongeante Photo Credit: Mary Gillies |
So next time you feel an urge to lie down for a few minutes after lunch, just do it. Don’t feel metaphorically entailed. We are intermittent beings. Seeking a permanent high—living only on the summits, as Nietzsche didn’t quite say—is a production-line aspiration. That goes for happiness too. Whereas napping in the valleys, as Diogenes realised, is the original acte gratuit.
But beware: pondering why individuals claim to be free when their freedom so closely resembles alienation may unfit you for work altogether.
*Internet searches have produced no results suggesting the website was removed at some point
Further reading:
Ivan Illich. Tools for Conviviality. Marion Boyars, London , 1974.
Thierry Paquot: L’art de la sieste. Zulma, Paris, 2000.
Josef Pieper. Leisure, The Basis of Culture (introduced by Roger Scruton). St. Augustine ’s Press, South Bend , Indiana , 1998
Christian Schütze: Das Grundgesetz von Niedergang: Arbeit ruiniert die Welt. Hanser, Munich, 1989.
© Iain Bamforth. First published as a shorter commentary in the British Journal of General Practice, 2000; 50, 457: 680
Iain Bamforth grew up in Glasgow and graduated from its medical school. He has pursued a peripatetic career as a hospital doctor, general practitioner, translator, lecturer in comparative literature, and latterly public health consultant in several developing countries, principally in Asia. His four books of poetry were joined by a fifth, The Crossing Fee, in 2013.
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