I can sleep with socks on, but I will inevitably overheat 3 or 4 hours into sleeping if I do so. I used to sleep so much better than I do now. I used to be a champion sleeper. Before I had kids (insert usual claim that kids ruin everything here).
Natter 71: Someone is wrong on the Internet
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
If I wake up between 5 a.m. and the alarm, I put a sleep mask on because too much light gets in and I can't fall back asleep otherwise. Although if I *stay* asleep through the light increasing, it doesn't wake me up. Weird.
And I'm in bed now, actually, so I'll post more about this tomorrow.
Is that kind of thing genetic?
Or learned behavior? I don't know. There probably is a genetic component to sleep preferences.
It's interesting to see the big dividing line on socks/naked feet. It really does affect your body heat quite a bit.
When I was young I remember feeling so restless and I could never figure out what to do with my arms. I used to wish I could take them off when I went to bed. Also, I used to have so many allergy/congestion issues I needed to be propped up on at least two pillows to have an open airway.
Sometimes to get myself sleepy now I have both arms out and thrown back above my head. That seems to do something to my system that makes it drowsier. Then when I get sleepy enough I roll over onto one side with both arms under the covers.
I tend to sleep better if I take my socks off. JZ needs extra heat. Somebody (her dad?) gave her a fake-fur lap throw that's just about her size and it fits on half the bed and keeps her toasty warm all night. She's slept much better under that. (Though getting over the bronchitis and dealing with her asthma was the Great Miracle of Sleeping for this year.)
I strongly think that Danny Elfman has way more of an influence on Burton's work than Vincent Price.
Do you think Elfman influences Burton, or just is a major component of the whole work?
sometimes I start with a night shirt, but it usually comes off . Feet must be free. sheet, blanket and comforter . I often wake up to hot and adjust - sometimes moving to the couch so the bed cools off. Mmost of the time just a sheet for me - 'til Matt's 6am alarm goes off- then I need All The Covers to protect me from the evil morning.
Also, if the temperature warms during the night, I can wake up and kick off my socks to lower my body temp. And now to bed, since I have a 7:30 Am hair appointment. yes, A fucking M.
I can't say if Elfman influences Burton but I do think Eflman's work is one of the critical components of Burton's style.
The dialogue-less scene in Edward Scisssorhands that is flashback where we see the inventor for the first time and we are made to understand the irony that his machines look monstrous and scary with sharp bits and permanently bolted smiles, but in truth, they are making something as simple and innocent as sugar cookies is effective because of the music and other nondiagetic sound. It's drums and tuba playing the precise rhythms of factory work. But when Vincent Price holds up the heart-shaped cookie, the change in music is what makes the scene so poignant. Suddenly we are back to the choral voices, to the fairytale feel, back to innocence.
I've watched that scene 3 times per class for 5 classes now.
DH and are like Tep and Tim. He sleeps in boxers with just a quilt and his with feet out...and a fan, there must be a fan. On my side of the bed, I have a down throw over the covers, which I am scrunched under, wearing flannel pajamas. I'd rather have just a duvet, but DH is top sheet addicted. We usually have a podcast playing while we drift off to sleep. As soon as the DH drifts off, which is before me since he's basically an Olympic-level sleeper and falls asleep INSTANTLY, I leap up and turn off the fan.
Side sleeper, top sheet. I always wore socks until I got a heated mattress pad. Now my feet warm up faster without the socks. Other sleepwear depends entirely on the current temperature.
but I do think Eflman's work is one of the critical components of Burton's style.
Definitely. Though I really like the score for the non-Elfman Ed Wood. Theremins and bongos! Which Elfman got to do with Mars Attacks.
The dialogue-less scene in Edward Scisssorhands that is flashback where we see the inventor for the first time and we are made to understand the irony that his machines look monstrous and scary with sharp bits and permanently bolted smiles, but in truth, they are making something as simple and innocent as sugar cookies is effective because of the music and other nondiagetic sound.
That really is one if his prettiest scores.
As soon as the DH drifts off, which is before me since he's basically an Olympic-level sleeper and falls asleep INSTANTLY, I leap up and turn off the fan.
It's interesting hearing all the different ways people adapt to their co-sleeper.
Emmett sleeps with a lullaby mix that I made for him, and I usually tuck him in. When I was growing up I always had the radio on, so if I woke up in the middle of the night I could hear a comforting murmur of voices. I also liked hearing my parents talking or a party in the house after I'd gone to bed.
R.E.M. called their first album Murmur, because Peter Buck and Michael Stipe bonded over that feeling of being a child and driving home with your parents late at night and being drowsy in the back seat, with just the dim light from the dashboard and the murmur of your parents voices.