(This post was last modified: 07-27-2017, 06:14 PM by churchilllafemme.)
I saw a picture on a web site this morning that got me thinking about hammocks. I have never been able to get comfortable enough in a hammock to sleep. There's just something about the forced curvature of my spine that feels wrong; I need to be lying flat to sleep. Yet for a long time people apparently have been sleeping well in hammocks, while camping, on old-time sailing ships, or just in everyday life in a village somewhere. I looked up 'hammock' on Wikipedia, and the information was kind of interesting.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hammock
This led me to thoughts about how I sleep now compared to my sleeping positions in the past. When I was a child I always slept lying on my right side, with my legs curled up partially. I don't know why - it just felt like the right way to do it at the time. Then in college I slept on my stomach, always with my head turned to the left; for some reason if I turned it to the right, my nose would get very congested. And now, for at least the last few decades, I have slept primarily on my back. Maybe it all has something to do with my aging vertebrae and the changes in bone mobility due to calcium deposits. Or maybe I'm just more 'open to life' now that I no longer sweat the small stuff so much - and now that I have the leisure time to wonder about useless topics like this...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hammock
This led me to thoughts about how I sleep now compared to my sleeping positions in the past. When I was a child I always slept lying on my right side, with my legs curled up partially. I don't know why - it just felt like the right way to do it at the time. Then in college I slept on my stomach, always with my head turned to the left; for some reason if I turned it to the right, my nose would get very congested. And now, for at least the last few decades, I have slept primarily on my back. Maybe it all has something to do with my aging vertebrae and the changes in bone mobility due to calcium deposits. Or maybe I'm just more 'open to life' now that I no longer sweat the small stuff so much - and now that I have the leisure time to wonder about useless topics like this...
John