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@harrisonqian / Work Reflections / wiki/strategies/sleep-strategy.md
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--- visibility: public-edit --- # sleep strategy the single hardest part of falling asleep is the mind refusing to stop. thinking about tomorrow, replaying today, planning, worrying, looping. the body is ready but the brain wont shut up. ## the body scan breath technique this is what actually works for me. every breath, i pick one specific point of contact between my body and the bed and focus entirely on the physical sensation there. - breath 1: my right hand. the weight of it, the texture of the sheet against my palm, the temperature. - breath 2: my right elbow pressing into the mattress. the pressure, the warmth where skin meets fabric. - breath 3: the back of my head against the pillow. the way it sinks in slightly. - breath 4: my left ankle. the specific feeling of the blanket draped over it. the trick is specificity. not "my hand" but "the exact feeling of my ring finger resting against my middle finger." not "my shoulder" but "the point where my shoulder blade makes contact with the mattress." why this works: it forces the mind into the present. you literally cannot think about tomorrow while simultaneously paying attention to the specific pressure of your right elbow against the bed. the future and past require abstraction. physical sensation is immediate. every time the mind drifts to planning or worrying, the next breath pulls it back to a specific body part. this is more effective than counting sheep or breathing exercises because those are repetitive enough that the mind can do them on autopilot while still worrying. the body scan requires genuine attention — each point is different, each sensation is unique. related to [[resets]] — this is the sleep-specific version of the "reflecting (just thinking about stuff and staring into space)" reset, except directed inward at physical sensation rather than outward at thoughts. ## the wall inversion lie on the floor. put your legs up against the wall, as straight as you can. just chill there for 30 seconds to a minute. the blood flow shift is immediate — you feel it in your legs within seconds. the gentle pressure change in your head is calming. its a physiological reset that doesnt require any mental effort. works especially well right before getting into bed. this is the same principle as the "hang from your knees" tired reset from [[resets]], but more controlled and more comfortable. you can do it every night as part of a wind-down routine. ## wim hof / cyclic hyperventilation the most aggressive relaxation tool. 30-40 deep breaths (inhale fully through the nose, exhale passively through the mouth), then hold on empty lungs for as long as comfortable. the breath hold is where the magic happens — a wave of calm floods in as CO2 builds and the body shifts into parasympathetic mode. this isnt subtle. 2-3 rounds of this and your nervous system is fundamentally different than it was 5 minutes ago. the tingling in your hands and face during the breathing rounds is the hyperventilation doing its thing — shifting blood pH, dumping adrenaline, then crashing into deep relaxation on the hold. i use this for two situations: 1. **cant sleep because wired/anxious** — the hyperventilation burns off the nervous energy, and the breath holds force parasympathetic activation. 2 rounds is usually enough. 2. **tired but need to stay awake** — paradoxically, 1 round of wim hof is also the best way to snap out of grogginess. the adrenaline hit during the breathing rounds is a full physiological wake-up. the difference is whether you do 1 round (energizing) or 3 rounds (deeply calming). this connects to [[exercise-as-reset]] — its the breathing equivalent of a 10-minute run. both work by overwhelming the current physiological state and forcing a reset. ## the stack for nights when sleep is really hard, stack all three: 1. wall inversion (30-60 seconds) — passive physiological shift 2. wim hof (2-3 rounds) — active nervous system reset 3. body scan breathing in bed — mental present-anchoring until sleep most nights the body scan alone is enough. the full stack is for when things are really cooked.
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