Author Archives: Theodora Blanchfield

The One Change I Made to Improve My Sleep

Sheep Farm New Zealand

Staring at the clock. Grabbing your phone and idly scrolling through Instagram. Tossing and turning.

We’ve all been there…and it sucks. 

But over the past few months — including, frustratingly, on vacation — I’ve had a really hard time getting to sleep.

Sleep Meme

Basically, this. I get into bed and my mind starts racing. 

I’d tried so so many things — from the natural like melatonin or magnesium to just taking a freaking Klonopin and calling it a night — and they either didn’t work at all or I’d wake up really groggy. I cut back on coffee past noonish.

I tried sleeping with my shades open, I tried sleeping with my shades shut. I put the temperature in my room up, I put the temperature in my room down.

Nothing. Awesome.

I’ve enjoyed meditating on and off but, to be honest, haven’t ever really stuck with it regularly.

A particularly wide-awake night a few weeks ago, I decided to give the Headspace app another try, and it’s completely changed my sleep.

They have an intro recording that discusses your relationship with sleep, and that we so often have a hard time falling asleep because it’s the first time we’ve stopped in our busy days. We also start comparing our wide-awake state to other times we’ve had a hard time falling asleep, and it’s a vicious cycle.

The actual meditation is great, too! It starts by asking you to play back your day in your head — from waking up to showering to commuting, etc. Even when I’m just trying to meditate and fall asleep on my own now, I’ve found this incredibly helpful. From there, you do a progressive muscle relaxation. I have TMJ and carry so much tension in my jaw, and I always feel some relief and release here, too.

And you? How do you fall asleep when you’re having trouble? Or do you have any specific bedtime rituals?

On the 2017 Race Calendar

Hey, remember when I used to run and blog about that?

I had a rocky relationship in 2016 with running, but I’m hoping for the best in 2017. It will suck again getting started, but I know it will be worth it again in the long run.

And so, I’ve signed up for a few races. As I said, my goal for this year is to do things intentionally, so I’m trying to bring that into everything, including even pulling out my credit card (pulling out? who are we kidding? The number is memorized.) to sign up for races. 

I’m trying to not get caught up in social media race excitement and think about if I truly want to do these races.

Here’s the ones that are so far a HELL YES for me. I like that Dani keeps a running race calendar on her blog, so I may do that throughout the year.

For now…

Franklin Lakes Triathlon.jpg

The Franklin Lakes Triathlon is one I’m really excited for! 

A few years ago, though I discovered that long-distance tris were not for me (I started training for a 70.3, only to realize how much long rides are also not for me), I really enjoyed triathlons, and this Franklin Lakes Tri is especially fun for me — in my hometown, long enough to feel challenging, short enough to feel doable and to train for without devoting a ton of time to.

Plus, even if my running ends up sucking, there’s two other disciplines to enjoy. 

MAYBE

Spartan Race

At work, we have a cool new partnership with Spartan — a program designed to prepare you for a Spartan race.

So…now I am thinking seriously about a Spartan SPRINT (none of that long business) at Citi Field (none of that mountain business, either.) Why? Because it sounds fun, and it’s something that scares me a little bit and sounds novel — and that, my friends, is fun. Our users push themselves to do things they never thought possible, and this is one of my I-never-thought-I-could-do-it items. If I do it, we’ll probably be doing a work team, so it will be all for funnies. (You know, with some of the most competitive people I know.)

Brooklyn Half

Brooklyn Half

So…this is where I took my first and only DNF last year. I’ll admit that I got a bit caught up in the social media excitement of people signing up for the race — but I took a moment to think critically. Did I really want to do this race after a crappy experience last year? What if I had another crappy experience? …but what if I had a great experience? And I got the redemption I wanted? I’ve PR-ed here, I helped two of my favorite people run their first half here. Honestly, I will be happy just to cross the finish line of this one — to prove I’ve still got it.

What about you? What races are you signed up for — and why?