Thursday, March 28, 2019

How to Fall Asleep in 2 Minutes or Less #TBT

Today's blog post was originally published last year:

That sounded like an interesting article on The Art of Manliness!

It's based on some training done with WWII fighter pilots:
A couple years into WWII, the U.S. military realized it had a problem on its hands. Due to the enormous pressures of aerial combat, many of its pilots were accumulating levels of stress so debilitating that they were cracking under it. The tension caused them to lock up in flight and make fatal mistakes — accidentally shooting down friendly planes, or becoming an avoidable casualty themselves.
In an effort to stem the loss of pilots and planes, the military brought in Naval Ensign Bud Winter to research, develop, and test a scientific method for teaching relaxation. Before the war, Winter had been a successful college football and track coach, who had also worked with a professor of psychology on techniques to help athletes relax and perform better under the stress of competition. Stationed at the Del Monte Naval Pre-Flight School in California, his mission now was to coordinate with other coaches and professors to create a course that would similarly instruct cadets on how to stay calm and loose under the pressures of combat.
There were two goals for the program...to teach the Naval aviators how to relax and how to fall asleep at the drop of a hat.
To accomplish the first goal, Winter taught the men how to physically relax. To accomplish the second, he taught them how to mentally relax. In fact, he essentially defined sleep as the state of being both physically and mentally relaxed.
To fall asleep at the drop of a hat, first you work on the former, and then the latter.
The article then goes on to tell how to accomplish both.
Keep in mind that being able to relax physically and mentally, and thus being able to fall asleep at the drop of a hat, is a skill, and like all skills, you shouldn’t expect to get the hang of it and have it work the first few times you try. You have to practice over and over again, until you get better and better at loosening up and calming down. That doesn’t mean you should work hard at trying to relax; that will just backfire and create tension. But you do have to practice this routine consistently.
This skill can come in handy when you need to take a nap-a-latte. I'll let Dr. Michael Breus explain this to you:


Interesting days


Today - Weed Appreciation DayBlack Forest Cake Day and Something On A Stick Day 

Tomorrow - Smoke and Mirrors DayNiagara Falls Runs Dry Day and Lemon Chiffon Cake Day

Next Thursday - Vitamin C DayTell A Lie Day, World Rat Day, Kickball Day, Cordon Bleu Day, D.A.R.E. Day, Carrot Day and Walk Around Things Day

April 28 - Clean Comedy DayPinhole Photography DayPay it Forward Day, Workers’ Memorial Day, Blueberry Pie Day, Cubicle Day, Biological Clock Day and Shrimp Scampi Day

Week long celebrations:
Apr 28 - May 4: Go Diaper Free Week
 

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