(no subject)
Feb. 5th, 2004 02:20 pmwell, i'm awake.
still not king.
slept a bit better last night, though it took until after 6am to fall asleep.
i woke up a few times between noon and two, but i appear to be whole now. and--best of all--i'm not too braindead to drive.
need to get body warmed up, shower, and head over to
xiane's house.
still not king.
slept a bit better last night, though it took until after 6am to fall asleep.
i woke up a few times between noon and two, but i appear to be whole now. and--best of all--i'm not too braindead to drive.
need to get body warmed up, shower, and head over to
no subject
Date: 2004-02-05 11:53 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-02-05 12:20 pm (UTC)at least you don't have fashionable facial scruff as well...
no subject
Date: 2004-02-05 01:07 pm (UTC)I've noticed I tend to fall right to sleep (in classes, meetings, and at night) when I start daydreaming (I'm talking about real daydreaming where you make your own first-person fiction story in your head, not the kind of rambling thoughts that most people seem to think are daydreaming--is it becoming a lost art?). I suspect this works for me because that kind of daydreaming is causing my brainwaves to move towards the theta range.
The way this all started was as a young child. I was so afraid of the spooks that I could never get to sleep. In boredom, I would just play more fun/comforting scenarios in my head. Eventually, I would get so sleep deprived and sleepy that I would drift off. As a result, I've ended up perfectly trained to fall asleep while daydreaming (plain old conditioning). I suspect other people either will already find that daydreaming naturally does move the brainwaves towards sleep, or they can persistantly daydream every night until they develop the same conditioning.