Body & Soul0 min ago
A test for you all
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I used to do that but all I do now is count in my head the number of hours between going to bed & when I have to get up (rather than number of the actual hour I have to get up). Unless I'm very tired I wake up about 1-2 minutes before my alarm virtually every morning.
Smudge - if it helps, when I can't drop off straight away, here's a little technique I've used since I was a kid: In my head l count backwards from 500. I count fairly slowly & at the same pace throughout, approx 1 number per second. If I get a number wrong or pause for more than 1 second I make myself start again. Might sound like a stupid routine but I've never stayed awake long enough to make it to 1 yet...
Yeah, it works, done it for years. Actually, it works so well that it's become second nature now - I just have to think what time I want to wake up and it happens, no routine at all really. Never fails. A tip, if you want to get up at a specific time (twenty past, ten to, something like that): imagine flying in a helicopter round Big Ben and seeing the clock's hands pointing to that exact time. See it very vividly, and think about the time the clock is showing. It just impresses it strongly on your mind. You'll find it works spot on.
About the original suggestion, first came across it in The Colditz Story, when the leader of the escape team (Pat Reid) was responsible for getting everyone up at 3 am for an escape attempt. He used the method and it didn't fail him, which made me think it must be dependable, since so much was riding on him waking up and he didn't have a clock.