It's a skill most of us learn in college, one that often dissipates when we start working from home: staying up all night functionally. As a young student studying for finals, staying up all night is as easy as grabbing a sleep deprivation drink, hitting the books, and storing and processing as much information as a 10GB hard drive until about a second after passing the test, you can't take it anymore.
Once you hit age 25, if you use the same guerrilla techniques, burning the midnight oil at your kitchen table or home office, it means you're going to spend the next day or two in absolute misery. Here's how to take on a project or presentation without nuking your body in the process.
Disclosure: The belgium business fax list tricks you'll learn here aren't going to save you from feeling extremely tired the next day. You're an adult now with an adult body. You'll need to take breaks. This is about minimizing how bad you'll feel after your evening work session.
Bank of dreams
Ah, yes. Sleep. Once you start working all night, you probably won't get much of a night's sleep. However, if you get fair warning that you're going to end up working all night (you're coming back from vacation, you're late, etc.), you should make sure you get quality sleep before your session. If something unexpected happens that you can't do anything about - you can just get on with it. If you know you're going to have to work straight through a given day, getting a good night's sleep beforehand will be a huge help.
Work on as many surfaces as possible, whether comfortable or unattractive.
When you work from home and your eyes start to droop, your favorite bed, chair, or couch will call out to you like a beautiful siren on the rocks. Resist that call! Instead, cover your usual resting spots with lots of random stuff like books, pots and pans, even old electronics. You'll want to get to where lying down can lead to injury (I'm serious), or moving stuff out of the way will result in a big crash of junk, a massive, loud avalanche of epic proportions. Stick with the stuff that just doesn't belong on your couch or bed.