[Mb-civic] Valley of the Rolls By MAUREEN DOWD
Michael Butler
michael at michaelbutler.com
Sat Mar 18 10:39:01 PST 2006
The New York Times
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March 18, 2006
Op-Ed Columnist
Valley of the Rolls
By MAUREEN DOWD
I'm not going all confessional, like one of these bare actresses baring her
soul on the cover of Vanity Fair. But I have a desperate secret, as the
actresses like to say, that may help others if I talk about it.
Or not.
I am a sleep-eater.
It has happened only a few times, and I'm not sure if it's connected to
Ambien. It started last year when a jumbo pack of Oreos mysteriously went
missing in my kitchen. I came down one morning to find the plastic sliced
open and all the cookies gone. I called my exterminator, certain there was a
crumb-covered critter lurking. He never found one.
A couple of other times, when I was staying in hotels with minibars, I found
Snickers wrappers by the bed or telltale Toblerone chocolate smears.
I confided in a friend, a fellow occasional Ambien user, who said he woke up
sometimes with Jackson Pollock-like splatters of Good & Plenty on his white
T-shirts.
New Yorkers have been calling their doctors and nutritionists this week to
see whether they should switch hypnotics, now that Minnesota researchers
have suggested that Ambien may be creating a new form of ravenous sleeper
cells, an alarming development given that some people had actually been
taking Ambien to avoid the urge to stay up and raid the fridge.
It may just be a new form of avoirdupois rationalization. (That's my story,
dear, and I'm sticking to it.) But a California woman included in one of the
studies said she gained 100 pounds from sleep-eating while on Ambien; a
Minneapolis woman in a full body cast was discovered by her son sleepwalking
to her kitchen, frying bacon and eggs on one night and turning on her oven
to 500 degrees on another; a Tennessee nurse said she'd devoured a whole
package of hamburger rolls "like a grizzly bear."
Susan Chana Lask, a New York City lawyer, has filed a class-action suit
against the makers of Ambien on behalf of users who are overwhelmingly
female. She gives examples of bad behavior by what she calls " 'Night of the
Living Dead' creatures": driving impaired and eating raw eggs and even a
buttered cigarette, and sleep-shoplifting DVD's.
Far more women suffer from insomnia, and far more women even young ones
pop sleeping pills than men. As Ariel Levy wrote in New York magazine, pills
are now seen as "brain styling," not mind-altering, because "the line
between medication and recreation has become blurred."
One girlfriend of mine wanted to call her Upper East Side doctor yesterday
and switch to Lunesta. "I have visions of myself in my Subaru crossing the
George Washington Bridge at 3 in the morning covered in Cheetos dust," she
said. But then she realized they'd probably find out something equally weird
about Lunesta next week that it causes you to run off with a Starbucks
barista and go to male strip clubs in your sleep.
The scary news of zombie hordes of Ambien sleep-eaters follows fast upon the
scary news of zombie hordes of Ambien sleep-drivers and zombie hordes of
Ambien sleep-sirens.
The New York Observer recounted the saga of an attractive editor at a
fashion magazine who hooked up with a young man in Soho and took him back to
her place.
"She was laying there and had taken her clothes off," he told the paper.
"Then, in completely slurred speech, she said: 'I just took two Ambien, so
anything you're going to do, you better do it before I pass out.' "
The next mishap is sure to be sleep-governing. A headline on Wednesday read
"Study: Ambien Users Invade Countries in Their Sleep; Wake Up With No Memory
of Reasons for Invasion, No Exit Strategy." The story was written by the
humorist Andy Borowitz, who also imagined that an Ambien side effect might
be a tendency of some politicians to concoct incomprehensible prescription
drug programs while asleep.
But real life once more outstrips satire, as the military in Iraq conducts
Ambien air assaults. The president and some Pentagon officials have no
memory of authorizing the strikes, and the generals in Iraq have no memory
that they've already used these tactics without lasting success.
There is, after all, precedent for Sleepers in Chief. The first President
Bush's doctor caught flak for giving him the sleeping pill Halcion
fingered as a possible contributor to Poppy's embarrassing frow-up moment at
a state dinner in Japan.
If you don't want to give up Ambien, doctors say, put chimes on your bedroom
door. The tinkling may wake you up on the way to get a snack or take a drive
to shoplift a new wardrobe for your fat zombie self.
John Tierney is on vacation.
* Copyright 2006The New York Times Company
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