Discussion Questions:
1. The Personal Escape
Imagine you could safely hibernate through one period of your life and wake up on the other side. Would you do it? If so, what would you choose to sleep through, and why?
2. Growth or Avoidance
Some would hibernate to escape hardship—illness, heartbreak, financial stress. Others see it as running away. Do you believe skipping difficulty is a form of wisdom, or does it rob us of something essential?
3. Those We Leave Behind
Hibernation separates us from the people we know. If you slept for five years, who would you worry about missing you? Who do you think would change the most in your absence, and how would that affect your relationship upon waking?
4. The Waiting Ones
Hibernation is never chosen by the sleeper alone. If a loved one decided to hibernate through a difficult period, would you wait for them? Would you feel abandoned, or would you respect their need to rest? What would you want them to do for you?
5. Society Without Us
If hibernation became common, certain people might be pressured to use it—the unemployed, the chronically ill, the elderly. Could this become a form of social cleaning, disguised as medical choice? How would society treat those who return, displaced in time?
6. The Present Dissatisfaction
Some argue that the desire to hibernate reflects a deeper unhappiness with the present. If you could change one thing about your current life without sleeping through it, what would that change be? What is stopping you?
7. Interactive Element
Find someone whose reason for hibernating—or refusing to—connects to something you have felt. Reply and ask: what do you think you might lose by staying, or gain by leaving?