I’m not really a baseball fan and I don’t care who wins or loses the games. But the calling of the pitches and the banter between the announcers provide something for my mind to latch onto so that I don’t think about work, war, climate change, or other topics that would keep me awake. I usually drift off in less than ten minutes.
I started this a few years ago listening to classic radio broadcasts downloaded from the Internet Archive:
https://archive.org/details/classicmlbbaseballradio
The first game of the 1949 World Series between the Yankees and Brooklyn Dodgers was particularly suitable for drifting off, because it went scoreless until the bottom of the ninth inning. I must have listened to it four or five times.
https://archive.org/download/classicmlbbaseballradio/1949%20...
This past April, I took out a one-year subscription to MLB streaming radio. I am now recording as mp3s all of the games this season for one team. Last night, I fell asleep to the May 7 game. This season’s full set of games should last me the rest of my life.
I listen to the mp3s on the iPhone app Bound with the timer set to 30 minutes.
In each episode, the affable host tells a story (or reads a catalog, or recaps a Star Trek episode, etc) in the most meandering, boring way possible. It sounds weird, but it's just interesting enough for me to stop thinking about other things - but not interesting enough that I want to stay awake. I highly recommend it to anyone that has similar problems.
Sorry if it sounds like I'm writing ad copy for the show, but it literally changed my life for the better.
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLowKtXNTBypH19whXTVoG3oKS...
The audio itself is usually a podcast, ranging from some kind of sleep sounds podcast, to a sleep meditation, to a Waking Up (heh) conversation, to some financial podcast or Stuff You Need To Know. None of them have been ideal and I don't like that I'm sometimes compelled to reach for one of these things as a crutch.
Things that usually result in a better sleep for me are reading a book to the point of sleep, and most recently plotting out the story I'm writing in my head - just thinking about it, basically. I try to stick with one of these options most of the time, but sometimes the urge to just put something on still wins out.
[1]: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jK3cMcH9e_c
I have found a podcasts in a field I am mildly interested in -- not enough to be so engaging that it keeps me awake, but not so boring as to let my distracting thoughts overpower it. I put the volume as low as I can, but not so low that I'm focusing hard to listen/follow the conversation.
I don't have any data about how fast I'm falling asleep, but I'd say it's probably 15-30min typical. A single one hour show can last me a few nights with a bit of overlapping playback -- e.g. night 1 start at 0min, night 2 start around 20-25min in, night 3 start about 35-45 min in and sometimes hit the end & have to start the next episode.
[1] https://mynoise.net/NoiseMachines/campingRainNoiseGenerator....
- Neapolitan neighbors arguing animatedly for 1 hour https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CgVIzt2cAog&t=2175s
or, alternatively,
- Matteo Salvini (representative of the Italian Lega party) who lists things in the soft lo-fi https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mNyethAqJzk&t=1969s
Concentrating on the lyrics when my mind is racing as I try to sleep helps to interrupt the intrusive thoughts.
White noise, nature sounds and people talking are not enough distraction.
Sometimes layering it with rain helps too.
I look for content that seems interesting in the moment but doesn't necessarily make me feel like I have to rewind if I miss anything. It's the best to just leave on in the background.
The youtube algorithm has been pushing 2+ hour iceberg streams to me recently as well.
Speedruns and Summoning Salt videos are classics I go to when I can't find anything specific and don't want to go searching. The Games Done Quick format is amazing. 100% speedruns are a solid category. I rarely know the game, so it hits that perfect place of interesting when I start and don't care about finishing and can leave on in the background for days without worrying about anything too scary or serious. I'm sure there are games with startling audio or video, but Games Done Quick is an event where they marathon different people speedrunning different games back to back on twitch and all of the donation money goes to charity. This summer they raised over 3 million dollars for charity. Additionally, I can safely assume the streams are going to be kid friendly so I know there's nothing too crazy that can happen. I don't personally care if speedrunners are family friendly or not, but family friendly content is generally smoother in tone which is helpful for falling asleep. SmallAnt focuses heavily on Nintendo games and from what I understand Nintendo has fairly strict rules for what's allowed by content creators. I don't agree with it from a content moderation standpoint, but at the same time, it makes content much more easily searchable and predictable when I need something neutral for sleep. Glitch runs and TAS (tool assisted speedruns) are cool too because they incorporate bots and technical exploits like memory overflow and race condition logic errors into breaking game logic in order to complete a speedrun fast. Pokemon yellow is crazy, it has been brought down to 1 minute 18second for the entire game.
I do pay for youtube premium so I don't have to worry about ads. Ads can be disruptive and wake me up. Most youtubers have a playlist of their streams which is a nice set and forget so I don't wake up to weird recommendations.