Fall Asleep Exercise
Insomnia rates have skyrocketed in the last couple of years. I wonder why? (sarcasm).
Typically, we are kept from falling asleep or falling back to sleep by our brain’s inability to switch out of problem solving mode and into rest mode.
So we use the cognitive shuffle.
Developed by Luc Beaudoin of Simon Fraser University in Vancouver, Canada the cognitive shuffle is asking the brain to enter the groggy state before falling asleep by shuffling random, non-threatening thoughts or ideas.
Here’s a free tool to help you do just that!
Insomnia rates have skyrocketed in the last couple of years. I wonder why? (sarcasm).
Typically, we are kept from falling asleep or falling back to sleep by our brain’s inability to switch out of problem solving mode and into rest mode.
So we use the cognitive shuffle.
Developed by Luc Beaudoin of Simon Fraser University in Vancouver, Canada the cognitive shuffle is asking the brain to enter the groggy state before falling asleep by shuffling random, non-threatening thoughts or ideas.
Here’s a free tool to help you do just that!
Insomnia rates have skyrocketed in the last couple of years. I wonder why? (sarcasm).
Typically, we are kept from falling asleep or falling back to sleep by our brain’s inability to switch out of problem solving mode and into rest mode.
So we use the cognitive shuffle.
Developed by Luc Beaudoin of Simon Fraser University in Vancouver, Canada the cognitive shuffle is asking the brain to enter the groggy state before falling asleep by shuffling random, non-threatening thoughts or ideas.
Here’s a free tool to help you do just that!