Thursday, January 2, 2025

Got 1 min? Hundreds take a mass ‘siesta’ in Mexico City

Approximately 350 people laid down to take a nap on Friday in the middle of one of the noisiest and busiest cities in the world.

How many actually drifted off wasn’t known, but the World Sleep Day event next to the Monument to the Revolution in Mexico City was the first of its kind in the world according to Mexican media reports.

World Sleep Day, which began in 2008, is commemorated every year on the Friday before the spring equinox of the Northern Hemisphere. Its slogan this year was “’Sleep Equity for Global Health.”

Held from 5 to 6:30 p.m., the event was “a peaceful demonstration for our right to rest,” said Javier Velázquez Moctezuma, the director of the Sleep and Neuroscience Center (CSN). “The cheapest medicine that exists is to sleep well,” he added.

“A person who sleeps well makes better decisions, is healthier and has less risk of physical and mental illnesses,” pointed out Dr. Guadalupe Terán Pérez, a sleep expert and CSN researcher. “On many occasions, the work schedules we have, the commutes we make [and] living in a globalized society do not allow us to guarantee this right.”

The independently-organized event also included a guided meditation and talks about the value of sleep, with tips on how to sleep better.

In the end, people were given only about 20 minutes for their nap, according to the newspaper La Jornada. Pre-registration was required to participate, and blue yoga mats, sleeping masks and travel pillows were provided.

According to the World Health Organization, around 40% of the world’s population experiences sleep disorders, the most common being insomnia.

The experts at the event said babies should sleep around 18 hours a day, children 10-12 hours, adolescents 8-9 hours and adults 7-8 hours.

In addition, the footrace “Corre por tus Sueños” (Run for your Dreams) was held on Sunday in the Bosque de Tlalpan National Park south of CDMX. Its aim was to support patients with sleep disorders who need specialized treatment.

If you happened to, uh, sleep through this year’s World Sleep Day, mark down your calendars for 2025, when it is scheduled for March 14.

With reports from La Jornada and El Financiero

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
Mexico's President Claudia Sheinbaum cutting a ribbon to open the completed Guadalajara-Puerto Vallarta highway

Por fin! After 13 years, GDL-Puerto Vallarta highway project finishes

2
The long-awaited highway will make reaching Pacific resort cities in and around Puerto Vallarta faster and easier.
A tiered water collection system in the Cutzamala water system for Mexico City

Mexico City will cut its reliance on water from the Cutzamala System by 50%, mayor announces

1
Brugada announced the plan at the inauguration of the first Agua Bienestar purification plant, part of a program to provide clean water in low-income areas hit by water shortages.
A Mexican 20-peso bill and a U.S. 20-dollar bill on an abstract black background. The Mexican bill is laying over the U.S. bill.

Peso falls to 20.9 to the dollar in its fourth consecutive day of depreciation

6
The peso is on track to depreciate more in 2024 than any year since the 2008 financial crisis.