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  • Syluxguy28O3
    replied
    Originally posted by Mindf!3ldzX View Post
    haha damn, next time it gets that bad, take rosey palm and her 5 friends out for a spin. that might help too haha

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  • Mindf!3ldzX
    replied
    haha damn, next time it gets that bad, take rosey palm and her 5 friends out for a spin. that might help too haha

    Leave a comment:


  • MadGypsy
    replied
    I collapsed. Pretty much literally.

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  • wicked_lord
    replied
    Originally posted by Mindf!3ldzX View Post
    did you try chamomile or lavender ? just curious if the bombardment of sleep was due to anything you did or if it just fell in your lap?
    ahhh.. yes indeed, Lavender. I have Lavender pillow's at home and in the truck just so I can get some good sleep. That shit helps for real!

    Leave a comment:


  • Mindf!3ldzX
    replied
    did you try chamomile or lavender ? just curious if the bombardment of sleep was due to anything you did or if it just fell in your lap?

    Leave a comment:


  • MadGypsy
    replied
    I finally got some real sleep!! 9 glorious, unbroken hours. Now, I'm ready to kick ass on summin. I feel like a force again.

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  • Mindf!3ldzX
    replied
    Lavender and/or Chamomile have a long history of being great sleep aids...

    Lavedner | University of Maryland Medical Center
    Originally posted by UMM.edu
    Insomnia or Agitation

    In folklore, pillows were filled with lavender flowers to help restless people fall sleep. Scientific evidence suggests that aromatherapy with lavender may slow the activity of the nervous system, improve sleep quality, promote relaxation, and lift mood in people suffering from sleep disorders. Studies also suggest that massage with essential oils, particularly lavender, may result in improved sleep quality, more stable mood, better concentration, and reduced anxiety. In one study, people who received massage with lavender felt less anxious and more positive than those who received massage alone. Several small studies suggest that lavender aromatherapy may help reduce agitation in people with dementia. Lavender flowers have also been approved in Germany as a tea for insomnia, restlessness, and nervous stomach irritations.
    ------

    Chamomile: A herbal medicine of the past with bright future
    Originally posted by US National Library of Medicine
    National Institutes of Health
    5.13 Sleep aid/sedation

    Traditionally, chamomile preparations such as tea and essential oil aromatherapy have been used to treat insomnia and to induce sedation (calming effects). Chamomile is widely regarded as a mild tranquillizer and sleep-inducer. Sedative effects may be due to the flavonoid, apigenin that binds to benzodiazepine receptors in the brain (6. Studies in preclinical models have shown anticonvulsant and CNS depressant effects respectively. Clinical trials are notable for their absence, although ten cardiac patients are reported to have immediately fallen into a deep sleep lasting for 90 minutes after drinking chamomile tea (47). Chamomile extracts exhibit benzodiazepine-like hypnotic activity (69). In another study, inhalation of the vapor of chamomile oil reduced a stress-induced increase in plasma adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) levels. Diazepam, co-administered with the chamomile oil vapor, further reduced ACTH levels, while flumazenile, a BDZ antagonist blocked the effect of chamomile oil vapor on ACTH. According to Paladini et al. (70), the separation index (ratio between the maximal anxiolytic dose and the minimal sedative dose) for diazepam is 3 while for apigenin it is 10. Compounds, other than apigenin, present in extracts of chamomile can also bind BDZ and GABA receptors in the brain and might be responsible for some sedative effect; however, many of these compounds are as yet unidentified.
    Last edited by Mindf!3ldzX; 12-26-2015, 11:04 AM.

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  • ArrrCee
    replied
    Originally posted by nahuel View Post
    yoga + meditation is really great, requires some time, is not a fast solution, but its really goood
    I second this... Reading some fiction or something before bed helps me too.

    I used to have this same problem, not being able to turn my brain off before bed. But with the combo of exercise, yoga, meditation once in a while and some light reading before bed, it's really helped over the past few years.

    It might also be me getting older and not caring as much about getting things done as i used to but who knows about that one.

    Leave a comment:


  • MadGypsy
    replied
    I get retarded amounts of exercise. I work out everyday, bike anywhere that I feel driving to would be silly (<5 miles) and my job is very physically demanding. I can aaaaaalmost sling a keg on my back with one arm. I just have to dip my step a little to get that hair extra. I also walk anywhere I feel a bike would be silly (<=2 miles round trip). I don't think more exercise is gonna help.

    My problem is primarily a mind that refuses to shut off. After I made this thread last night I went to bed (AGAIN) and {ping} a zillion ways to secure websites "danced" in my head.... it's pretty miserable sometimes.

    Leave a comment:


  • Solecord
    replied
    Man 5 or 6 hours of sleep?? If I don't get a minimum of 7.5 hours I am a zombie the next day!!

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  • Sgt-PieFace
    replied
    Well I sometimes have trouble falling asleep, and what I find works for me is getting exercise. I know it sounds kinda tacky, but it doesn't take much. Usually it only takes walking around and doing dumb sh*t with friends for 30 mins. This works because since your body burns calories, it triggers a response from the brain of "Been doin' stuffs. Need sleep".

    Hope you find a solution!

    Leave a comment:


  • wicked_lord
    replied
    Always NyQuil if that will help any.

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  • MadGypsy
    replied
    I can do 6 if I get 6 consistently. I can't do 6 if I'm burning day after day with 3 or less.

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  • wicked_lord
    replied
    Sound's like you need to go see a sleep specialist and see what your problem is.

    I sleep 5.5 hours or less per day/night and I am fully functional at the second my eye's are open. The hardest problem I face is falling asleep, but once asleep rest assured 5.5 hour's later I am fully awake.

    Leave a comment:


  • nahuel
    replied
    yoga + meditation is really great, requires some time, is not a fast solution, but its really goood

    Leave a comment:

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