Flyers falls asleep on seatmates shoulder, | Lifestyle News

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Flyers falls asleep on seatmates shoulder,…

Talk about a memorable flight.

Everyone is aware of the sensation — you’re dozing off mid-flight and your head bops from facet to facet, as you wrestle to discover a snug sleeping place.

Well, one sleepy flyer was having this expertise until she finally acquired snug enough to catch some Zs — unknowingly on her seatmate’s shoulder.

To make issues worse, her boyfriend, who appeared to have gotten a kick out of his girlfriend’s human pillow, took a photograph — and is now getting slammed by social media for not serving to her.

The flyer took to TikTookay to share what went down.

Looking at the digicam with sun shades on, overlay textual content read on her video, which now has close close to 2 million views: “when you get off a flight and the woman next to you immediately voice-to-texts her friend saying ‘worst flight ever, i’ll text you later… just everything about it’ meanwhile my boyfriend tells me i slept on her shoulder the entire flight — and he accidentally took a live photo of it (with the flash she added in the comment section).”

The viral video has over 300 feedback, most questioning why the boyfriend didn’t wake his sleepy girlfriend.

“We aren’t mad enough at the boyfriend.”

“why did he let this happen and why didn’t she do smth they’re both the villains here.”

“why did he let you do that?”

“I’d be so mad at my bf bro.”

“Why wouldn’t your bf just like gently move your head to his shoulder?”

All jokes apart, as embarrassing as this sleeping scenario would possibly’ve been, at least this flyer was ready to catch some sleep on her flight.

Experts say many flyers wrestle to fall asleep on a airplane due to the mixture of dry air, background noise and low lighting can keep the mind in a semi-alert state. Friends Stock – stock.adobe.com

For those who wrestle to sleep in any place while in the air, journey professional Dr. Rachel Keene recommends the 4-7-8 breath approach: inhaling for 4 seconds, holding it for seven counts and slowly exhaling for eight.

“If you repeat the exercise for two minutes, it slows your heart rate and tells your body it’s safe to rest,” Keene told the Daily Mail.

“Yoga breathing techniques calm the body down and bring it into a more relaxed state,” she explained. “This kind of breathing can help us focus our mind and our body away from worries and repetitive thoughts,” said integrative drugs specialist Dr. Melissa Young.

Breathing techniques while on a airplane are “a way to focus your mind on something other than your worries,” Young added.


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