Sleepy Wisdom | Grandpa Huxley

Your Life Deaf, Mute & Blind (Hellen Keller) - Documentary for Sleep

3 h 12 min · I går
episode Your Life Deaf, Mute & Blind (Hellen Keller) - Documentary for Sleep cover

Beskrivelse

When your own walls feel too close at 3am, fall asleep to Helen Keller's 86 years for sleep, lose your sight, hearing, and voice at 19 months, then spend a lifetime rebuilding the world by touch. Forget the children's-book version. This immersive biography for insomnia takes you inside the wild child who smashed dolls, the moment a wet pump and a single spelled word built a self for the first time, the trial at eleven that ended fiction forever, the socialist who joined the IWW because the regular party was 'too slow,' the lover whose family showed up with a gun, the vaudeville performer billed as the Eighth Wonder of the World. Told in slow 2nd person sleep documentary voice by Grandpa Huxley, Helen Keller's 86 years for sleep is built for a restless mind in the long quiet hours, the most extraordinary life you've never fully heard, walked chapter by chapter so your breath slows and your body remembers it is allowed to rest. You will sit in a dark Alabama house in 1887 and feel a stranger's hand spell water into your palm. You will learn thirty words in an afternoon and fall in love with a man your family will not allow you to keep. You will read Marx in braille and find yourself on a vaudeville stage and an FBI watchlist. Tonight is not a motivational reel. It is a long, tender sleep documentary about a woman who built a self from nothing, written to carry you into deep, restorative rest. Key takeaways: • The moment Helen Keller feels water in one palm and a word in the other, and you remember what it was to be understood. • What it actually feels like to have something inside you and no way to get it out. If you've swallowed your real life, this is the episode. • Why Helen Keller's 86 years for sleep softens the 3am loneliness of being married to someone who doesn't hear you. • The quiet reframe for anyone who feels trapped, Helen's pre-language prison makes your walls look like doors. • What would open for you if one person finally spelled your real name into your hand? Helen makes that unavoidable tonight. Timestamps: (00:00:00) The Night You Wake as Helen Keller at Age Six (00:00:20) Tuscumbia Alabama 1880, The Year You Go Dark (00:07:48) The Fever That Takes Your Sight and Sound (00:10:04) The Wild Child Before Anne Sullivan Arrives (00:15:34) Anne Sullivan, March 3rd 1887, The Stranger (00:24:35) The Water Pump at Ivy Green Where You Learn W-A-T-E-R (00:36:57) Helen Keller Learns Thirty Words in an Afternoon (00:50:02) Perkins School for the Blind, You, Age Eight (01:03:57) Radcliffe College, The First Deafblind Degree (01:15:40) Helen Keller Reads Marx in Braille and Joins the IWW (01:24:19) The Vaudeville Stage, The Eighth Wonder of the World (01:35:34) The Love Letter From Peter Fagan Your Family Burns (01:44:47) Anne Sullivan's Hand Goes Still in October 1936 (01:57:30) The FBI File on Helen Keller the Radical (02:07:39) Polly Thomson and the Quiet Years in Westport (02:18:38) Before You Sleep, What Helen Taught Without Sight ⭐ Rate on Spotify or Apple, it helps quiet voices reach the people who need them. 💬 Comment where you're listening from, what time it is there, and anything you enjoyed about one of our recent episodes! #SleepDocumentary #WisdomForSleep #SleepStories #HistoricalWisdom #Mindfulness #BedtimeStory #HelenKeller #AnneSullivan #AmericanHistory #FallAsleep #Disability

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58 Episoder

episode Your Life Deaf, Mute & Blind (Hellen Keller) - Documentary for Sleep cover

Your Life Deaf, Mute & Blind (Hellen Keller) - Documentary for Sleep

When your own walls feel too close at 3am, fall asleep to Helen Keller's 86 years for sleep, lose your sight, hearing, and voice at 19 months, then spend a lifetime rebuilding the world by touch. Forget the children's-book version. This immersive biography for insomnia takes you inside the wild child who smashed dolls, the moment a wet pump and a single spelled word built a self for the first time, the trial at eleven that ended fiction forever, the socialist who joined the IWW because the regular party was 'too slow,' the lover whose family showed up with a gun, the vaudeville performer billed as the Eighth Wonder of the World. Told in slow 2nd person sleep documentary voice by Grandpa Huxley, Helen Keller's 86 years for sleep is built for a restless mind in the long quiet hours, the most extraordinary life you've never fully heard, walked chapter by chapter so your breath slows and your body remembers it is allowed to rest. You will sit in a dark Alabama house in 1887 and feel a stranger's hand spell water into your palm. You will learn thirty words in an afternoon and fall in love with a man your family will not allow you to keep. You will read Marx in braille and find yourself on a vaudeville stage and an FBI watchlist. Tonight is not a motivational reel. It is a long, tender sleep documentary about a woman who built a self from nothing, written to carry you into deep, restorative rest. Key takeaways: • The moment Helen Keller feels water in one palm and a word in the other, and you remember what it was to be understood. • What it actually feels like to have something inside you and no way to get it out. If you've swallowed your real life, this is the episode. • Why Helen Keller's 86 years for sleep softens the 3am loneliness of being married to someone who doesn't hear you. • The quiet reframe for anyone who feels trapped, Helen's pre-language prison makes your walls look like doors. • What would open for you if one person finally spelled your real name into your hand? Helen makes that unavoidable tonight. Timestamps: (00:00:00) The Night You Wake as Helen Keller at Age Six (00:00:20) Tuscumbia Alabama 1880, The Year You Go Dark (00:07:48) The Fever That Takes Your Sight and Sound (00:10:04) The Wild Child Before Anne Sullivan Arrives (00:15:34) Anne Sullivan, March 3rd 1887, The Stranger (00:24:35) The Water Pump at Ivy Green Where You Learn W-A-T-E-R (00:36:57) Helen Keller Learns Thirty Words in an Afternoon (00:50:02) Perkins School for the Blind, You, Age Eight (01:03:57) Radcliffe College, The First Deafblind Degree (01:15:40) Helen Keller Reads Marx in Braille and Joins the IWW (01:24:19) The Vaudeville Stage, The Eighth Wonder of the World (01:35:34) The Love Letter From Peter Fagan Your Family Burns (01:44:47) Anne Sullivan's Hand Goes Still in October 1936 (01:57:30) The FBI File on Helen Keller the Radical (02:07:39) Polly Thomson and the Quiet Years in Westport (02:18:38) Before You Sleep, What Helen Taught Without Sight ⭐ Rate on Spotify or Apple, it helps quiet voices reach the people who need them. 💬 Comment where you're listening from, what time it is there, and anything you enjoyed about one of our recent episodes! #SleepDocumentary #WisdomForSleep #SleepStories #HistoricalWisdom #Mindfulness #BedtimeStory #HelenKeller #AnneSullivan #AmericanHistory #FallAsleep #Disability

I går3 h 12 min
episode POV: You've Escaped Every Prison in History | Documentary for Sleep cover

POV: You've Escaped Every Prison in History | Documentary for Sleep

If you feel trapped in your own life tonight, tuck in with this pov sleep documentary, history's greatest prison escapes, and walk out of 11 prisons no one was supposed to leave alive. Eleven impossible escapes, one immersive 2nd person sleep documentary, all of them yours. This pov sleep documentary, history's greatest prison escapes, is a bedtime biography for adults built to live another life tonight in the body of Dieter Dengler crawling through Laotian jungle at ninety-eight pounds, Vrba and Wetzler walking out of Auschwitz with the report that saved two hundred thousand lives, Yoshie Shiratori using miso soup to corrode his own handcuffs, Casanova through the lead roof of the Doge's Palace, and the Great Escape from Stalag Luft III. Slow narration by Grandpa Huxley, calibrated as a sleep documentary about human ingenuity and the unbreakable will to be free. You will sit in a bamboo cage in monsoon humidity and plan a breakout you might not survive. You will lie in a fortress attic in Venice in 1756 with a piece of iron you smuggled in years ago. You will swim out of San Francisco Bay in a fog so thick the searchlights cannot find you. You will tunnel out of a Soviet prison in Uruguay with a hundred and ten companions and walk into a stranger's living room for tea. Each story is short enough to begin a wave of sleep, and the next one starts before you have surfaced. Tonight is not a true-crime feed. It is a slow, calm walk through the people who refused to stay locked in. Key takeaways: • The moment 13 prisoners from 13 centuries all refuse the walls, and the cell you've built around your own life starts to look optional. • In this pov sleep documentary, history's greatest prison escapes, you feel what it is to plan an escape for years while everyone around you calls you insane. Midlife listeners will know this one. • Why living these 13 escapes rewrites what you mean by 'trapped' at 3am, the walls are always thinner than the belief. • The reframe for the job, marriage, or routine you can't leave: every prison in history was escaped by someone told they couldn't. • What would you plan for if you gave yourself the same 23 days these escapees did? Tonight you borrow their patience. Timestamps: (00:00:00) The Night You Escape Every Prison in History (00:00:28) Dieter Dengler, 23 Days in the Laotian Jungle (00:07:15) Tonight You Walk Out of Auschwitz With Rudolf Vrba (00:09:13) Yoshie Shiratori, The Japanese Escape Artist (00:22:51) Punta Carretas 1971, 111 Men Through a Tunnel (00:35:20) Casanova Escapes the Doge's Palace in Venice, 1756 (00:51:20) Alcatraz, June 1962, The Three Men on a Raft (01:05:39) Colditz Castle, The Glider in the Attic (01:20:46) Richard McNair, The Mailbag Escape of 2006 (01:33:42) Jack Sheppard, London's Folk Hero of 1724 (01:47:25) Escape From Pretoria, The Wooden Keys of 1979 (02:00:20) Stalag Luft III, The Great Escape of 1944 (02:16:51) For A Long Night, The Walls Only Hold If You Believe (02:29:50) Before You Sleep, Every Lock Has an Answer ⭐ Rate on Spotify or Apple, it helps quiet voices reach the people who need them. 💬 Comment where you're listening from, what time it is there, and anything you enjoyed about one of our recent episodes! #SleepDocumentary #WisdomForSleep #SleepStories #HistoricalWisdom #Mindfulness #BedtimeStory #PrisonEscape #TrueStory #GreatEscape #FallAsleep #DieterDengler

30. juni 20263 h 2 min
episode Broicism Is Not Stoicism (Marcus Aurelius) cover

Broicism Is Not Stoicism (Marcus Aurelius)

Tonight we sit down with the actual Marcus Aurelius. Not the marble bust. Not the supplement-bottle face. Not the quote-card version sold to angry young men as a license to feel less. The man who wrote, in his own hand, by candlelight, in a tent during a plague that killed millions, that there is nothing manly about rage. That civility and kindness are more human, and therefore more manly. That real strength is gentleness. This is an hour essay for the man who has done everything broicism told him to do, faithfully, and feels hollow. The man whose discipline turned out to be comfort avoidance. The man who has been performing a counterfeit version of a strength he never read in the actual book. If that is you, you are not broken. You were never taught.⁠⁠⁠ [https://open.spotify.com/playlist/1d0o7bLxig59ifoot1Uk8k?si=16143673c7be4b2d]⁠ [https://open.spotify.com/user/31h4bv2jfhffnoezwodszi6nm7wy?si=d1730cc8c0834e6d] ⭐ Rate on Spotify or Apple, it helps quiet voices reach the people who need them⁠ 💬 Comment where you're listening from, what time it is there, and anything you enjoyed about one of our recent episodes!

27. juni 20261 h 0 min
episode POV: Your Drug Empire Is About To Go Global | Sleepy Biography cover

POV: Your Drug Empire Is About To Go Global | Sleepy Biography

If you're tired of a dead-end Tuesday and need to feel alive tonight, fall asleep as a drug lord, build six empires from Escobar to El Chapo, take six falls, and learn what powder and ambition cost. Six lives, six empires, six unmistakable falls. When you fall asleep as a drug lord six times in one night, this sleep story for adults puts you inside Freeway Ricky Ross learning to read his own indictment in prison, Griselda Blanco inventing the motorcycle drive-by, El Chapo tunneling out of maximum security like the doors are revolving, Frank Lucas smuggling Blue Magic in military coffins, Al Capone undone by a quiet accountant with a pencil, and Pablo Escobar barefoot on a Medellín rooftop one day after his forty-fourth birthday. Slow second-person POV by Grandpa Huxley, a piece of historical fiction for sleep written for midlife restlessness and the long quiet hours, the rise, the peak, the fall, and the silence after. You will stand on a corner in South Central Los Angeles in 1979 and learn the chemistry of a drug that has not yet hit any newscast. You will walk through a Sinaloa tunnel built with mining engineers and motorcycles. You will hear Pablo Escobar offer to pay off Colombia's national debt in exchange for staying out of an American prison. Each story is long enough to grow loud and short enough to fall quiet again. Tonight is not a glorification. It is the rise and the cost, slowed down for sleep, and told with affection for the ordinary children these men used to be. Key takeaways: • The moment you feel Pablo Escobar offer to pay off a country's debt, and realize how much money it takes before 'more' stops mattering. • What it feels like to build an empire from the only door that was open to you. Anyone stuck in a dead-end job will recognize this. • Why choosing to fall asleep as a drug lord six times in a row kills the Netflix glamour and leaves you strangely grateful for your boring Tuesday. • The emotion that hits when absolute power arrives and you're lonelier than when you had nothing. A reframe for anyone chasing the next rung. • What would you do with the unopened doors in your life if you believed the violent ones all dead-end? Six empires answer tonight. Timestamps: (00:00:00) Tonight Your Drug Empire Goes Global for Insomnia (00:00:44) Freeway Ricky Ross, The $600 Million CIA Pipeline (00:03:39) Griselda Blanco, The Godmother of Miami Cocaine (00:05:50) El Chapo, The Tunnel King Who Fled Sinaloa (00:19:57) Frank Lucas, Blue Magic in Coffins From Vietnam (00:35:08) Al Capone, The Accountant Who Took Down Chicago (00:49:17) Pablo Escobar, The $30 Billion Empire in Medellin (01:08:34) Whitey Bulger, The Boston Boss Who Was an FBI Rat (01:30:49) John Gotti, The Teflon Don and the Wire He Missed (01:57:36) Toto Riina, The Sicilian Who Bombed the Judges (02:12:39) Meyer Lansky, The Mob Accountant Who Walked Free (02:26:00) Before You Sleep, The Price Every Empire Pays ⭐ Rate on Spotify or Apple, it helps quiet voices reach the people who need them. 💬 Comment where you're listening from, what time it is there, and anything you enjoyed about one of our recent episodes! #SleepDocumentary #WisdomForSleep #SleepStories #HistoricalWisdom #Mindfulness #BedtimeStory #PabloEscobar #ElChapo #AlCapone #TrueCrime #FallAsleep

24. juni 20262 h 38 min
episode Seneca's Evening Stoic Routine: A Historical Reconstruction for Modern Sleep cover

Seneca's Evening Stoic Routine: A Historical Reconstruction for Modern Sleep

Two thousand years ago, the richest man in Rome did seven small things every night before sleep. We reconstructed the routine from his own hand, and it still works. 🕯️ I have come to believe the most important minutes of your day are the last few, the ones right before you fall asleep, and that almost everyone wastes them. Seneca did not. Tonight, lamp by lamp, let me show you exactly what he did, and how to do it yourself. 🚀 ⁠⁠Download Free Stoic Sleep Journal On Patreon Here⁠ [https://www.patreon.com/posts/nightlings-sleep-160682844?utm_medium=clipboard_copy&utm_source=copyLink&utm_campaign=postshare_creator&utm_content=join_link] ⁠⁠⁠🎧 Most Popular Sleepy Playlist⁠ [https://open.spotify.com/playlist/1d0o7bLxig59ifoot1Uk8k?si=16143673c7be4b2d] If these Sleep Stories help your night, don't forget to subscribe so the next story can find you when you need it most. Where are you listening from tonight, and what time is it where you are? Tell me in the comments. I am always quietly amazed at how many of us are awake in the same dark, in so many different places. Timestamps: (00:00:00) Seneca's 7-Step Evening Routine for a Restless Mind (00:03:00) Seneca's Stoic Secret the Quote Cards Always Leave Out (00:04:51) How Seneca Ended Each Day Before the Night Could Take It (00:11:02) Seneca Put Out the Lamp Before Sleep Every Night in Rome (00:16:54) The Bathhouse Noise That Taught Seneca to Find Inner Quiet (00:23:24) Seneca's Nightly Trial, 3 Questions Before He Slept (00:31:00) The Gentle Verdict Seneca Gave Himself Each Night (00:36:22) Why Seneca Kept the Same Hour Every Night for 40 Years (00:41:26) Seneca Learned to Let Go Each Night and Died Without Fear (00:54:51) Seneca's 7 Routines, One Breath, and the Lamp Going Down ⁠▶ Follow on Spotify⁠⁠⁠ [https://open.spotify.com/user/31h4bv2jfhffnoezwodszi6nm7wy?si=d1730cc8c0834e6d] ⭐ Rate on Spotify or Apple, it helps quiet voices reach the people who need them. ⁠⁠⁠📚 Sources⁠⁠⁠ [https://docs.google.com/document/d/1lnfYdakEjWq_TgKp2dn9cgNiPdonlS3-7N_AXRkHbMA/edit?usp=sharing] 💬 Comment where you're listening from, what time it is there, and anything you enjoyed about one of our recent episodes! DISCLAIMER ⚠️ This video is for informational & entertainment purposes only. It explores psychological & historical concepts but is not professional advice (legal, medical, or otherwise). ____ #Seneca #Stoicism #SleepDocumentary #WisdomForSleep #GrandpaHuxley #StoicWisdom #FallAsleep #EveningRoutine #boringhistory #historyforsleep

21. juni 202657 min