News1 min ago
sleeping on a train
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by andizuki1982. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.It's the 'rerturn to the womb' thing - you are warm and reasonably comfortable, and bneing rocked, so your instinct is to sleep.
Personally, all my train joruneys are three minutes long - that's how long it takes for me to sit down and doze off. No problem going to London - the train terminates at Euston, and one of the cleaners wakes me up (honestly!).
Before mobile phones, I would have to ask a passenger to wake me at Birmingham / Manchester, where ever, because if left, I would awake in Exeter sidings at 3.00 a.m. Now i cvan set my mobile alarm, so no problems.
Similarly, on planes, I am asleep beflore taxi-ing, and have to be woken when we are at the terminal, so i can get off.
Personally, if I know I'm travelling for more than an hour I get into travel mode, completely switch off and sleep. Makes the long journeys fly!
However, have not yet mastered the not dribbling on oneself thing! Thought this was unattractive until some bloke followed me off a train one day and gave me his number claiming he'd been watching me and thought I was gorgeous. Quite obviously I never called him as he blatantly was insane!
Personally I can never sleep on trains, buses or planes; the only time I can remember doing it was on a long overnight direct flight from Los Angeles to London, but otherwise I'm awake from start to finish, regardless of the time of day or night. A 4/5 hour flight from Birmingham to the eastern Mediterranen leaving at 10 or 11 pm means a missed night's sleep for me........