Tuesday, December 17, 2019

How writing a five-minute to-do list can help cure your insomnia

How writing a five-minute to-do list can help cure your insomniaHow writing a five-minute to-do list can help cure your insomniaWe already know that writing a to-do list can help us hold ourselves accountable during busy work days. What you may not know is that your nightly to-do list can also be a way to cure your sleeplessness, as one new study published in theJournal of Experimental Psychology Generalfound.Study Writing to-do lists helps you to fall asleep mora quickly than just writing down your thoughtsTo test the power of a to-do list on our brains, a team led by Michael Scullin at Baylor University recruited 57 volunteers to fall asleep in a lab during a weekday. The volunteers were randomly split into two groups that were each told to do a five-minute writing assignment before bedtime at 1030 p.m.One group was told to remember everything they needed to remember to do the next day, while the other group was told to write down tasks they had already accomplished.The group told to write a to-do list fell asleep more quickly, taking an average of about 15 minutes to fall asleep, compared to the 25 minutes it took for the group told to write down tasks they had already done.What this finding suggests is that thinking about all the great things we have accomplished may not be the best way for us to to feel less worried at night. By forcing us to confront our unfinished long list of tasks we need to do, a to-do list may actually help us feel less stressed and more sleepy.The researchers theorize that to-do lists help us relax into sleep mode by helping us offload our worries onto the written page. Most people just cycle through their to-do lists in their heads, and so we wanted to explore whether the act of writing them down could counteract nighttime difficulties with falling asleep, Scullin said.The bottom lineJournaling your thoughts has already been found to help us boost our creativity and to relieve our anxieties before a high-pressure event. Now, we kno w that journaling specifically about the future goals we need to complete can help us feel relaxed enough to sleep better at night.Looking for an inspiring way to start your day? Sign up forMorning MotivationIts our friendly Facebook ? that will send you a quick notenzeichen every weekday morning to help you start strong. Sign up here by clicking Get Started

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