In 1964, 17-year-old Randy Gardner set the scientifically documented record for the longest time without sleep: 264.4 hours (eleven days and twenty-five minutes).
The Teen Who Stayed Awake for 11 Days Straight
In December 1964, a 17-year-old San Diego high school student named Randy Gardner decided to stay awake for as long as humanly possible. His goal? To break the world record for sleep deprivation and win a science fair. What followed became one of the most famous experiments in sleep research history.
The Experiment Begins
Gardner didn't just wing it. Stanford sleep researcher William Dement heard about the attempt and flew down to observe, bringing scientific credibility to what could have been dismissed as a teenage stunt. Lieutenant Commander John J. Ross from the U.S. Navy Medical Neuropsychiatric Research Unit also monitored Gardner throughout.
The rules were simple: no stimulants, not even coffee. Just willpower, pinball, and basketball to stay awake.
What Happens When You Stop Sleeping
The deterioration was gradual but unmistakable:
- Day 2: Difficulty focusing, mild irritability
- Day 4: Hallucinations began—Gardner thought a street sign was a person
- Day 6: Speech slurred, memory severely impaired
- Day 9: Fragmented sentences, paranoid episodes
- Day 11: Expressionless face, couldn't complete simple mental tasks
By the end, Gardner couldn't subtract seven from 100 in a series. He'd get to 65 and forget what he was doing.
The Recovery
After 264.4 hours awake—eleven days and twenty-five minutes—Gardner finally slept. His first sleep lasted 14 hours and 40 minutes. Surprisingly, he didn't need to "catch up" on all the lost sleep. Within a few nights, his sleep patterns returned to normal.
Even more remarkably, follow-up examinations showed no long-term psychological or physical damage. Gardner went on to live a normal life, though decades later he did report struggling with insomnia—an ironic twist he attributes to the experiment.
Why This Record Still Stands
Guinness World Records stopped tracking sleep deprivation attempts in 1997, citing health concerns. While some claim to have beaten Gardner's record, none have been scientifically verified to the same standard.
The experiment revealed something profound: the human body demands sleep. You can't train yourself out of it. Gardner's brain eventually started taking "microsleeps"—brief moments of unconsciousness lasting just seconds—essentially forcing rest even while he appeared awake.
Today, researchers consider Gardner's experiment both invaluable and unrepeatable. It showed that extreme sleep deprivation causes temporary psychosis-like symptoms but appears to be survivable. It also proved something we all know intuitively: eventually, sleep always wins.