Sleep-Regulation

The Circadian Consent Crisis: Why Your Sleep Schedule Now Requires Municipal Approval Before You Close Your Eyes

ATLANTA — In a stunning policy reversal that has sleep scientists calling it a “bureaucratic assault on basic human function,” residents across the Southeast are being told to wait for a 48-hour review cycle before their nightly nap can begin.

The regulation comes after the Atlanta Department of Zoning and Rest Patterns discovered that “unauthorized slumber” had violated Section 7.3 of the Municipal Light-Permitting Code.

“We’re seeing a 143% increase in residents attempting to nap without proper nocturnal documentation,” said Mayor Marcus Thistlethwaite during a press conference that was held entirely in dark mode. “This is about public rest infrastructure, folks. You can’t just… sleep in. That’s… a zoning violation. And I mean that literally.”

Department of Circadian Compliance Now Requires 'Dream Logs' for Every Sleep Episode Exceeding 45 Minutes

Citizens who nap longer than 45 minutes without first filing a “Dream Log Declaration Form 7B-C” face potential citations from the newly formed Department of Circadian Compliance, according to a press release issued Tuesday from Assistant Secretary for Slumber Regulation Dr. Harold McSnooze.

“We are seeing too many unmonitored sleep cycles leading to unauthorized REM deprivation and unpermitted lucid dreaming,” Dr. McSnooze explained during a hastily-convened briefing in a conference room that smelled faintly of stale coffee and bureaucratic desperation. “A person needs permission before they enter deep sleep. It’s a matter of national security.”