best cure for insomnia?

TwistedBladez

Well-Known Member
My friend told me to eat some cheese (solid block kind of cheese) it helps to make you fall asleep easer

nother thing that I find that works is close to the end of my day I drink water don't have bright lights on and have some music that relaxes me.
 

littlewhitewhore

Well-Known Member
if anyone happened to be a qualified pharmacologist with an MD i dont think it would be wise to stake their career on a silly argument about what makes you sleep. simple answer is to wiki sedatives.
a lot of people seem to be finding it hard distinguishing between a sedative and a hypnotic.

The easiest thing to do is talk to a doctor. What if someone here was to recomend something that interferes with other medication (such as a benzo with a ssri)? a doctor would know that it is unsafe to mix because he has your medical records. PEOPLE.....ONLY TRUST PROFESSIONALS (and yourself if you accept the consequence).
 

littlewhitewhore

Well-Known Member
btw - eating cheese makes you dream....FACT! any dense foods will still be digesting while you sleep, this causes the brain to stay awake a little more than it otherwise would, a'la dreams.
 

sittinherebored

Well-Known Member
im 18 and going to the doctor is a bit too expensive for me. but i have no allergies or health problems so im not that worried but im not gonna take anything that i havent researched before-hand
 

dannyking

Well-Known Member
btw - eating cheese makes you dream....FACT! any dense foods will still be digesting while you sleep, this causes the brain to stay awake a little more than it otherwise would, a'la dreams.

And did you know that studies revieled that eating different types of cheese resulted in different types of dreams?? i.e. Cheddar brought good dreams and edam brought bad dreams. Thats not exact information but just an example.


Having just ingested a massive dose of cheddar I found this quite interesting:

“Now that our Cheese & Dreams study has finally debunked the myth that cheese gives you nightmares we hope that people will think more positively about eating cheese before bed,” says Nigel White, British Cheese Board secretary.

“In fact, our results show that eating different types of British cheese can make your dreams more interesting so sleep could now become a whole new adventure.”

-ends-

Notes to editors

The British Cheese Board’s Cheese & Dreams study was undertaken during a seven day period with 200 participants (100 male and 100 female). Six different types of British cheese were given to an equal number of participants. The cheeses included:

Stilton, Cheddar, Red Leicester, British Brie, Lancashire and Cheshire.

During one week, each participant ate a 20g piece of cheese 30 minutes before going to sleep and recorded the type of sleep and dreams that they experienced.

Cheese & Dream Study Results

Different Cheeses for Different Dreams

Red Leicester proved to be brilliant for helping participants to get a good night’s sleep – one quarter slept well every single night of the study, and 83% of all nights under the influence of Red Leicester were good sleep experiences. As for dreams, Red Leicester is the cheese to choose if you are feeling nostalgic about your past – over 60% of participants eating this cheese revisited their schooldays, or long-lost childhood friends, or previous family homes and hometowns.

Stilton -eating participants enjoyed their sleep too – over two thirds had good sleep experiences during five out of the seven nights. However, if you want some vivid or crazy dreams, the King of British cheeses is the one for you – particularly if you are female. While 75% of men in this category experienced odd and vivid dreams, a massive 85% of females who ate
Stilton had some of the most bizarre dreams of the whole study – although none were described as bad experiences. Highlights included talking soft toys, lifts that move sideways, a vegetarian crocodile upset because it could not eat children, dinner party guests being traded for camels, soldiers fighting with each other with kittens instead of guns and a party in a lunatic asylum.

British Brie caused all participants to sleep very well, but dreams varied between males and females; women tended to experience very nice dreams, such as Jamie Oliver cooking dinner in their kitchens, or relaxing on a sunny beach. By contrast, the men who ate Brie experienced rather odd, obscure dreams, such as driving against a battleship, or having a drunken conversation with a dog.

If you are thinking of changing career, or just suspect there could be a slightly more ideal job out there, snack on a lump of creamy Lancashire before bed and you might get some guidance; two thirds of all Lancashire participants had a dream about work – but only 30% of these involved the participants’ real-life occupations. One ambitious dreamer saw herself as a successful Prime Minister - one of her popular reforms involved teaching useful finance in schools, including how to choose the right mortgage.

Cheddar -eating participants tended to dream of celebrities, ranging from the participant’s family sitting in a pub with Jordan, to a Glaswegian old firm football match with Gazza and Ally McCoist. Ashley from Coronation Street also featured, as did the cast of Emmerdale - and one lucky girl helped to form a human pyramid under the supervision of Johnny Depp.

However, if you just want a good night’s sleep without too many dreams, then choose lovely crumbly Cheshire . In this category, over half of all nights were dreamless, while participants stated that 76% of all Cheshire-induced sleeps were either “quite good” or “very good”.
 

sittinherebored

Well-Known Member
And did you know that studies revieled that eating different types of cheese resulted in different types of dreams?? i.e. Cheddar brought good dreams and edam brought bad dreams. Thats not exact information but just an example.


Having just ingested a massive dose of cheddar I found this quite interesting:

“Now that our Cheese & Dreams study has finally debunked the myth that cheese gives you nightmares we hope that people will think more positively about eating cheese before bed,” says Nigel White, British Cheese Board secretary.

“In fact, our results show that eating different types of British cheese can make your dreams more interesting so sleep could now become a whole new adventure.”

-ends-

Notes to editors

The British Cheese Board’s Cheese & Dreams study was undertaken during a seven day period with 200 participants (100 male and 100 female). Six different types of British cheese were given to an equal number of participants. The cheeses included:

Stilton, Cheddar, Red Leicester, British Brie, Lancashire and Cheshire.

During one week, each participant ate a 20g piece of cheese 30 minutes before going to sleep and recorded the type of sleep and dreams that they experienced.

Cheese & Dream Study Results

Different Cheeses for Different Dreams

Red Leicester proved to be brilliant for helping participants to get a good night’s sleep – one quarter slept well every single night of the study, and 83% of all nights under the influence of Red Leicester were good sleep experiences. As for dreams, Red Leicester is the cheese to choose if you are feeling nostalgic about your past – over 60% of participants eating this cheese revisited their schooldays, or long-lost childhood friends, or previous family homes and hometowns.

Stilton -eating participants enjoyed their sleep too – over two thirds had good sleep experiences during five out of the seven nights. However, if you want some vivid or crazy dreams, the King of British cheeses is the one for you – particularly if you are female. While 75% of men in this category experienced odd and vivid dreams, a massive 85% of females who ate
Stilton had some of the most bizarre dreams of the whole study – although none were described as bad experiences. Highlights included talking soft toys, lifts that move sideways, a vegetarian crocodile upset because it could not eat children, dinner party guests being traded for camels, soldiers fighting with each other with kittens instead of guns and a party in a lunatic asylum.

British Brie caused all participants to sleep very well, but dreams varied between males and females; women tended to experience very nice dreams, such as Jamie Oliver cooking dinner in their kitchens, or relaxing on a sunny beach. By contrast, the men who ate Brie experienced rather odd, obscure dreams, such as driving against a battleship, or having a drunken conversation with a dog.

If you are thinking of changing career, or just suspect there could be a slightly more ideal job out there, snack on a lump of creamy Lancashire before bed and you might get some guidance; two thirds of all Lancashire participants had a dream about work – but only 30% of these involved the participants’ real-life occupations. One ambitious dreamer saw herself as a successful Prime Minister - one of her popular reforms involved teaching useful finance in schools, including how to choose the right mortgage.

Cheddar -eating participants tended to dream of celebrities, ranging from the participant’s family sitting in a pub with Jordan, to a Glaswegian old firm football match with Gazza and Ally McCoist. Ashley from Coronation Street also featured, as did the cast of Emmerdale - and one lucky girl helped to form a human pyramid under the supervision of Johnny Depp.

However, if you just want a good night’s sleep without too many dreams, then choose lovely crumbly Cheshire . In this category, over half of all nights were dreamless, while participants stated that 76% of all Cheshire-induced sleeps were either “quite good” or “very good”.
thats really interesting. how in the world did you come across that?
 

dannyking

Well-Known Member
Dont know. Just read it somewhere. Probably of of the scientific journals. They can be quite cool and scary sometimes.
 

sittinherebored

Well-Known Member
im gonna have to try that. thats more of what i was looking for because i didnt want to take pills or anything like that really
 

littlewhitewhore

Well-Known Member
so let me get this straight. in cali its legal to grow weed for lots of ailments? i mean insomnia isnt really covered by weed, officially its a light sedative and analgesic with anti-vomiting properties.
 

sittinherebored

Well-Known Member
i guess the light sedative part is enough. on one of those shows on the news a guy got a med license because he broke his pinky finger a couple years back
 

SOorganic

Well-Known Member
"The easiest thing to do is talk to a doctor. What if someone here was to recomend something that interferes with other medication (such as a benzo with a ssri)? a doctor would know that it is unsafe to mix because he has your medical records. PEOPLE.....ONLY TRUST PROFESSIONALS (and yourself if you accept the consequence)."

U hit it right on head,that was my point Exactly!!! Dont trust any one with your health except a Certified M.D. U cant Sui a member on RIU for malpractice for recommending a certain medication that ends up doing damage to your body, you CAN Sui your doctor though! Why, because you PAY the Man/woman to give u legitmate help, RIU is free and is an open forum to any ponce with an opinion
 

sittinherebored

Well-Known Member
"The easiest thing to do is talk to a doctor. What if someone here was to recomend something that interferes with other medication (such as a benzo with a ssri)? a doctor would know that it is unsafe to mix because he has your medical records. PEOPLE.....ONLY TRUST PROFESSIONALS (and yourself if you accept the consequence)."

U hit it right on head,that was my point Exactly!!! Dont trust any one with your health except a Certified M.D. U cant Sui a member on RIU for malpractice for recommending a certain medication that ends up doing damage to your body, you CAN Sui your doctor though! Why, because you PAY the Man/woman to give u legitmate help, RIU is free and is an open forum to any ponce with an opinion
i dont take any meds and im very careful. my mom was an rn and taught me to be really careful
 

shepj

Oracle of Hallucinogens
"The easiest thing to do is talk to a doctor. What if someone here was to recomend something that interferes with other medication (such as a benzo with a ssri)? a doctor would know that it is unsafe to mix because he has your medical records. PEOPLE.....ONLY TRUST PROFESSIONALS (and yourself if you accept the consequence)."

U hit it right on head,that was my point Exactly!!! Dont trust any one with your health except a Certified M.D. U cant Sui a member on RIU for malpractice for recommending a certain medication that ends up doing damage to your body, you CAN Sui your doctor though! Why, because you PAY the Man/woman to give u legitmate help, RIU is free and is an open forum to any ponce with an opinion
You realize that the people on RIU are probably more likely to care about your well being than a medical doctor who almost works on what you could call commission.. if a doctor cures what ailes you, he just lost his "customer". Doctors are the ones who get people hooked on benzoz, barbiturates, opiates, opioids, etc. Before you talk about what we don't know on here just because you yourself are not educated in pharmacology.. just think about it for a minute.
 

MrBaker

Well-Known Member
You realize that the people on RIU are probably more likely to care about your well being than a medical doctor who almost works on what you could call commission.. if a doctor cures what ailes you, he just lost his "customer". Doctors are the ones who get people hooked on benzoz, barbiturates, opiates, opioids, etc. Before you talk about what we don't know on here just because you yourself are not educated in pharmacology.. just think about it for a minute.
I gotta agree with this. Although I will not agree that all doctors are this way, I will agree that some (too many) are. I also agree partially about the "commission" as Drs for sure get flack/slack for what they prescribing...be it from you, drug sales people, the insurance company etc.

I watched my buddy go to therapy, and have some asshole prescribe him shit that he didn't need, and made him think he had some kind of chemical brain imbalance. I'm very happy that 6 months later my friend doesn't go to the psych anymore, and he lives a happy life without those fuckin' zombie pills that the jackass "Dr" gave him. Don't get me started on how Drs throw fuckin' adderall and shit like that around.
 

joker152

Well-Known Member
script - remeron and a fucking burger. not script - either 3 tylonol pm's a bowl and a full stomach or some nighttime sudafed a bowl and full stomach. i take a few pm's every night eat somethin and smoke a bowl and i got hardcore insomnia.
 
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