Really? How To Sleep Like a Hammock Professional?
Right now you are probably thinking, ”Are you kidding me?
Do I need advice on how to sleep in a hammock?”Yes, as a matter of fact you do. That is, if you’re new to this type of sleeping. We will show you some right ways to sleep in the hammock. In order to benefit optimally from hammock sleeping there are some things to take into consideration.
Some people find that sleeping in a hammock hurts their back. They probably don’t know about the correct way to lie in a string hammock. If you go lie in its length your body will fold up like a banana.
There's a quick fix to avoid being draped in a U shape, with head and feet raised, and belly at the bottom of the U. You just have to position yourself diagonally. If you cross the surface with your feet on one edge and your head on the other you will lie almost flat.
Feeling crushed may result in an onset of "don’t bury me alive"-phobia. You may be experiencing that the sides of your hammock are squeezing you too tight towards center. This effect sometimes gives people shoulder pain and make it tough to get to sleep.
Here, the remedy is the same. Make sure to spread yourself out at an approximate 45-degree angle on the hammock and feel how much more room you have.
If, on the other hand, you’re feeling the fear of claustrophobia after you’ve been asleep for a while, one of the best solutions is to try a bigger hammock. Typically, bigger hammocks won’t dip in the middle as much. If this isn’t an option, perhaps making the hammock more taught (by either putting the posts (or trees) farther apart and thus flattening the hammock or by tying the hammock tighter to the posts (or trees)).
Because the hammock leaves space under you while you sleep as well as above you (assuming you’re not smashed up against a ceiling while lying in your hammock), often people find that draft causes the hammock to be a little colder.
This is especially the case for people who are using hammocks outside.
Just put some padding (for insulation) on the hammock. If the hammock pad isn’t enough (in addition to a sleeping bag, blankets, and sheets), you could always try just putting a sheet or buffer down the middle of the bottom of the hammock.
Usually the buffer will stop breeze flowing under the hammock and, therefore, cut down on the cold drafts that keep you up at night.
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One of the most heard complaints by mattress loving anti-hammockites, is that hammocks aren’t comfortable to sleep on because they move too much.
Ah, yes! The old gravity complaint. Long the bane of the water bed community, people who find movement, shall we say, problematic to a good night of rest claim that in order for one to be optimally at rest one cannot be in a state of movement.
However, recent research shows there are some unexpected benefits to this rocking motion. This, I would like to refer to as the instability paradox.
Indeed, physicists might have once agreed with this premise. Nowadays the swinging undulation provided by a hammock is actually one of its greatest benefits. The feeling of being cradled like a baby actually helps us fall asleep faster and we sleep deeper which has several benefits.
You know when, in summer, you have been floating on your air bed all day, the swinging feeling you may still have at night? Sailors have this as well and it’s called ‘sea legs’. It’s comparable with, if not actually the same as, the effect provided by the undulation of a hammock. And it’s relaxing to most of us.
So to answer the question, how to deal with instability? You probably need to get used to it. But there’s a fair chance you may like it.
Sleeping in a hammock limits your mobility. This can be annoying. Especially if you are used to tossing and turning a lot you may feel like a rabbit in a purse net. You might think that you absolutely need the ability to move freely to get asleep but what if the rocking sensation makes this demand superfluous?
Moreover, this limitation may in fact be another reason you feel more rested afterwards. Anyway, considering it’s also a matter of taste, it can be a major disadvantage of hammock sleeping. Everybody’s different and some people just don’t like the trapped feeling.
See the part on claustrophobia for tips on how to increase freedom of movement.
Conversely, if what you really fear is not being suffocated but falling out, just do the opposite and let that bad boy hang lower in the middle. The higher edges will provide a more secure feeling.
Often when the body is subjected to the angles, movement, and gravity associated with hammock sleeping and isn’t used to it, one could notice a pain or discomfort in their legs, a numbness upon waking, or a squeezing or pinching sensation.
Mostly this has to do with improper blood flow. By leveling the hammock as much as possible you can usually counteract blood flow problems. If this isn’t possible in your situation (maybe you just don’t have the kind of leeway with the post or tree that you’re using to overcome an angle issue) you can help relieve some of the blood flow issues with a propped up neck or leg.
Using a pillow or cushion under the affected extremity is usually a pretty effective remedy.
Sleeping on your stomach in a hammock is pretty uncomfortable. But it doesn’t mean that if you are a belly sleeper, this is not for you. Hammock sleeping is something different. Even though you sleep on your stomach in a bed you will probably lay on your back or side in a hammock.And believe me or not but chances are you may actually like it.
If you, as a belly sleeper, suffer from lower back pain in the morning you owe it to yourself to give it a try since belly sleeping is linked to lower back pain. (the lumbar spine goes into excessive hyperextension and as a result the posterior elements of the spine are jammed together.)
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