Mostly I fall asleep to Alan Watts, Charles Bukowski (read by someone with a better voice haha), sometimes a reading of Khalil Gibran's The Prophet. When I get bored with those, I try radio stations, just whatever one interests me at the moment. Sometimes I'll listen to the "learn [language] while you sleep" videos, just as a goof.
I listen to short science videos. I usually put them into a playlist of about five videos and fall asleep by the second. New videos or topics I know less about go first.
My favourites are Dr Becky, PBS Space Time, PBS Eons, Omega Centauri and Urknall, Weltall & das Leben. Angela Collier would be up there as well, but her videos are too interesting to fall asleep to. And I also like Looking Glass Universe, but she tends to show too much stuff you have to see.
No, I prefer to read to sleep. But I also just... go to sleep, sometimes.
The French Whisperer. "Whisperer" is a bit of a misnomer since he speaks softly instead of actually whispering but he is very French. He covers a pretty wide range of history, mythology, science, and literature/arts. There's a YouTube channel for videos but he uploads audio-only versions on podcast platforms.
I tend to go for story-telling podcasts, and within those I gravitate towards Twilight Zone/Outer Limits/Black Mirror style weird anthologies.
Right now I’m finding a lot of great stuff in:
- The Other Stories (all kinds of stuff, they have a different theme every month or so)
- The Wrong Station (similar, but less likely to stick to a theme for a while)
- Gray Matter (lots of modern adaptations of older horror/sci-fi, like Lovecraft)
- The Antiquarium of Sinister Happenings (higher ratio of dumb stuff, but still some gems)
- The Program (Black Mirror-esque)
- The Truth (various radio plays. Many aren’t sci-fi, but still weird in some way. Kind of reminds me of the bits of Inside No. 9 I’ve seen.)
Listening to podcasts also helps me immensely to fall asleep. But it's difficult to find content that is not too boring and not too interesting.
My favorites are (and I doubt it would work for you looking at your preferred content)
- behind the bastard
- imaginary worlds
- darknet diaries
- build for tomorrow
Can only judge for the first 10 minutes of each episode because success.
I'm more low-tech, i set my mobile to minimum volume and use some equalizer app to reduce volume even more. Then i put the speaker right next to my ear.... need to upgrade on this :-)
I love listening to college lectures for topics I'm interested in but don't fully grok. I fell asleep in them back when I was paying for it and getting tested on the material. Now I can listen to the same lecture 50 times if I want. And no test.
An all time favorite: Lenny Susskind's Stanford open lecture series on Quantum Mechanics
Down side: sometimes I dream that I am trying to ask a question and the lecturer never notices. I have literally in the dream started running around terrorizing the room going insane screaming why does this professor not acknowledge my existence?!
Doubly hurtful when it's Lenny; he's such a comforting father-figure
I've been rewatching DS9 at night and falling asleep to that.
I'm just gonna put a happy little Bob Ross ... right here.
History of the universe, or fall of civilizations podcast.
Sleep With Me and Sleep Magic podcasts are great. Both have interesting enough content to listen to, but designed to make you sleepy. Also they talk like normal people. I can’t stand the ones where people are using their “sleepy ASMR voice.”
All the This Week in Tech (TWIT) podcasts are also really good, and long so good to fall asleep to. Also good if you can’t fall asleep since they’re pretty interesting.
Darknet Diaries is a good one - great stories.
Casefile. Would recommend an earphone if you have a partner hahaha
There's a dude on YouTube that repairs old cameras, hour long videos that I try to pay attention to but always puts me in that state where I can feel myself falling asleep, and my eyes won't stay open.
"thank you?"
-that guy, probably
Yep, lately it's been Max Richter 's album Sleep.
Supplemented with eye mask, melatonin, and an attempt to keep bedtime and wake up hours very consistent. When I can't sleep, sometimes the last resort is to go sleep somewhere else, like the living room couch or the guest bedroom. For some reason, that can break me out of the rut and fall asleep.
Paper books with nightlights, or ebooks on low light level.
Reduced sensory input works like a charm.
I typically need something familiar to listen to in order to fall asleep. I doubt it would work for you, but for me personally, Alpharad among us vods work great. I envy you, as a single person it's very difficult early in a relationship to navigate these things
If you don't mind unsettling/horror/sci fi stuff, I recommend Exploring Series on YouTube. I find their voice just that right level of interesting enough to listen to the actual info if I want to, but calm enough to fall asleep to as well.
They have a few Lovecraft book readings as well, but I usually just binge the SCP Foundation recordings, haha.
His scp stuff is great, as he isn't just another wiki reader like most, but instead commenting and explaining it.
Sleeping with celebrities is celebs trying to calmly talk you to sleep. Empire and Revolutions are great podcasts. You can learn and then re-listen the next day if you want to learn more.
Would I lie to you is amazing, and the stories start to become a safety blanket. The unbelievable truth is great too.
I do, it also greatly helps with my work based anxieties related to next day woes. I find it also helps me relax and sleep when dealing with my chronic migraines to be able to listen, and in a way see, with my ears only since I get severe occular issues with them.
I pretty exclusively listen to video game lps, especially on migraine days, as I find comfort in knowing the game that is being played so well I dont feel the urge to look.
If that sounds up your alley there are a few creators I can recommend, all of which do not raise their voices, shout in surprise, or have sharp jumps in audio levels. They all balance their audio very very well.
Rhadamant: Narrative driven stories in a variety of games with a large focus on Rimworld. He does a very good job of explaining everything so you really can "watch" without seeing and fall asleep comfortably listening to a story. My favorite was the OG wendigo series personally but if you don't know Rimworld that may be heavy. Life on the Rim is tough.
Halfman: Very different here but his rags to riches series on Tarkov feels like listening to a survival novel set in a warzone.
Aavak: Calm and collected every time with a very soothing tone. Unlike the others has a wider back catalogue of games so may be more options to grab your interest.
The Black Pants Legion - TexTalksBattletech: Lore videos on Battletech (big tabletop mech war set in an alternate timeline) super cool stuff. Lots to dig into.
TheAshHeritor: I started with the narrative lets plays of Age of Wonders because I was playing it in a similar way. The creator is an author for Warhammer and it really shows in the way they commentate. There is a current series running on Rogue Trader as well that is quite good.
Here's hoping you find some joy and, most importantly, some sleep.
Ancient Civilisations or a short history of ... from the noiser network.
Some of the episodes are narrated by Paul McGann (?) who's a british actor, other episodes are from another guy with a very similar voice. Both are great voices for falling asleep to.
I recommend Paul Fellows, who has a large catalog of brief astronomy lectures under his "Once Around" series.
Really just about anything. I can fall asleep to movies, videos, music, audiobooks, whatever. I just keep it at a low volume
I don’t, but I do have a mask and that helps a lot!
I know some people use gameplay videos as background noise to fall asleep, someone I follow made a Sniper Elite video where he quietly narrates invasion mode for an hour and a half
Lately I've been watching Noel Phillips videos on YouTube. He's an airline geek (as am I) and has been to some really unique places - some are interesting places on different continent, some just random remote airports in the middle of American nowhere.
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