07-10-2021 05:54
07-10-2021 05:54
How to Sleep Better Why Does the Sound of Water Help You Sleep?
The crash of ocean waves, the babbling of brooks, the pitter-patter of rain on shingles — many people swear by these watery sounds to help them fall asleep and stay in la-la land. Why does flowing "agua" apparently have such a powerful and popular drowsing effect?
Part of the answer lies in how our brains interpret the noises we hear — both while awake and in the dead of night — as either threats or non-threats.
Certain sounds, such as screams and loud alarm clocks, can hardly be ignored. Yet other sounds, like the wind in the trees and waves lapping ashore, we sort of tune out. [Ocean Sounds: The 8 Weirdest Noises of the Antarctic]
"These slow, whooshing noises are the sounds of non-threats, which is why they work to calm people," said Orfeu Buxton, an associate professor of biobehavioral health at Pennsylvania State University. "It's like they're saying: 'Don't worry, don't worry, don't worry.'"
You can listen to rain sound in this YouTube channel: www.youtube.com/rainsounds
07-11-2021 05:44
07-11-2021 05:44
I think you are on to something, @Maltz . Many sound machines offer rain, lapping waves, wind in the trees and other soothing sounds. For me, the best sleep comes when I can hear a constant, gentle rain outside my bedroom windows.