Has anyone that works in tech (presumably a large portion of HN) found an effective way to set yourself up for consistently high quality sleep?<p>I don't have too much difficultly getting to sleep (takes maybe an hour depending on screen time before bed), but seem to almost always wake between 3 and 5am, with a 50/50 chance of being able to fall back to sleep. It gets insanely frustrating, laying in bed, tired, but seemingly unable to sleep.<p>Removing screens from the day seems to help a bit but mainly only with falling to sleep. I work in software so cutting screens out is not particularly feasible during the week days. Plus, I don't want to entirely remove all non-essential screen use as I enjoy working on my own side projects.
Pls try to do this very simple trick -<p>Put your eyes in peripheral vision mode (looking at multiple objects at the same time). This helps you de-focus and helps de-stress your eyes and facial muscles. Some what magically your brain goes into relaxation mode which eventually helps in deep and fast sleep.<p>Have been doing this from about 8 months, never failed me once.
I don't have this problem, but my partner does who is a computer scientist (so similar issue with screen time). Muscle relaxation videos on youtube have been helpful (<a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ihO02wUzgkc" rel="nofollow">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ihO02wUzgkc</a>), as has this self meditation service: <a href="https://reverihealth.com/" rel="nofollow">https://reverihealth.com/</a>
That's happened to me lately. Rather than laying in bed, I find that reading 10-15 minutes, with warm, dim lights on stops the random thoughts and eventually allow me relax back to sleep.
One thing to check is sleep apnea. It has become relatively straightforward to diagnose with the advent of at home sleep tests — you put on a special watch and sleep in your bed. If you have it, sleeping with a CPAP machine will be a revelation. A pulmonologist can examine and diagnose you. Highly suggest getting checked for it.
If you live in a legal cannabis state, investigate that by asking specifically about strains that help with sleep. There are quite a few!<p>Initially it cured me of my insomnia and then it re-taught me how to sleep. There was some initial grogginess but that passed and then I was able to taper off usage.