The situation is dire
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
The league addiction is a fireaxe to the leg, nothing else needed
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
So many times I've been on a great streak and I just can't sleep right anymore and it ruins it all.
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go $fsck yourselfreplied to [email protected] last edited by
Here's more pixels so you can actually read all the labels of the characters
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Been looking for tricks to make sleeping easier. I've been noticing stretching helps me relax a lot.
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Ziglin (they/them)replied to go $fsck yourself last edited by
Thank you, I was wondering what the little red cuboid in panel 3 was
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Thanks to my executive dysfunction I'll never start meditating but those guys start acting like it anyway.
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Queen HawlSerareplied to [email protected] last edited by
This is satire right? I can't seem to get meditation to do anything for me.
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yeah, in my experience regular gym usage resulted in much better sleep, not in quality and schedule.
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[email protected]replied to Ziglin (they/them) last edited by
If anyone still couldn't: League of Legends Addiction
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[email protected]replied to Queen HawlSera last edited by
Meditation totally saved me personally, I used to be crippled with depression, insomnia, anxiety and bipolar disorder. Now I'm happy and healthy with no medication.
The thing is, it takes YEARS and you really have to keep up the practice while you are getting little results for a long time.
But then boom you look back and it's like "woah I'm way better now".
Maybe you just need to try a different style that suits you better... after a while (depending on how often/how long you are meditating) it should be pleasant enough you want to keep trying it -
[email protected]replied to go $fsck yourself last edited by
This was a god-send on this one. So hard to read
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
If it takes years, how do you know it's the medicine? Couldn't it also just be time and maturity?
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
There are of course the basics—limit blue light exposure, have a wind-down time, only use your bed for sleep, caffeine cutoff after #pm (some people say 5, some people say 3, I think this is entirely body-dependent). Melatonin supplements can also help. Soothing sounds, of course.
Beyond that, everyone is different.
I found that reading is useful (get an e-ink reader or a paper book to avoid screen distractions and blue light throwing your rhythms off).
I also found that not trying to sleep when I can't is useful; when I'm laying in bed and can't fall asleep, I go and do the dishes or read on the couch for a half hour, and then try again.
For me, turning the temperature down also helps. I let the house get down below 64° at night; saves me money (thermal battery effect in summer, less furnace usage in winter), and helps tell my body I should be in sleeping mode.
A few years ago, I also had a sleep study and discovered that I have sleep apnea. Now, the process of putting on the mask at night also helps get my body ready to sleep. That's in addition to the better sleep quality and more infrequent wakeups.
Also, you might just be trying to sleep too early for your body's natural rhythm. Maybe your work schedule doesn't allow you to change that, but if you can, try pushing your bedtime back a little bit. Not everyone needs to sleep from 10-6; some people are just more naturally able to sleep from 12-8.
Good luck, and good night.
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[email protected]replied to go $fsck yourself last edited by
So grateful.
The lower pixels trend is just awful. Never understood it. Probably cuz I'm old.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Things get compressed pretty often by default when exporting to other platforms/websites/formats/etc. Saves on data and 90% of the time is irrelevant
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
At least it's not an arrow to the knee. ... Wait ... Or is it worse?
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[email protected]replied to Queen HawlSera last edited by
For guided meditation it takes practice to learn to let go and figure out what your mind needs to enter such a state. It's a trance state, which some people are better or worse at.
For observer style I like to do mild exercise (walking or casually biking for me) and letting my mind roam free. The trick is you let your thoughts happen as they will, without trying to encourage or discourage any of them. You just let then play themselves out. It's very much a "the only way out is through" thing
There's also energy style and I recommend starting with guided energy meditations and once you find them helpful and understand the basic gist you can free-form decently.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Compression saves costs when you're serving millions of images per day. And for 99% of images, nobody cares.
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[email protected]replied to Queen HawlSera last edited by
If you like music, try music meditation: listen to a track and every time you notice that you're doing anything other than paying attention to the music, pull it back to the song.
Disclaimer: I made up this style after doing meditation for a year or so, it seemed to follow the principles but fit in better with my lifestyle