My. Tesco Android Signal Is Poor
Technology1 min ago
No best answer has yet been selected by scoobysoo. 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.Well I've always used a simple method of waking up at a preordained time, and it works for me. It came about after reading Pat Reid's book, The Colditz Story, while I was still at school. Pat was in charges of escape attempts and he had to wake up at a set time during the night and get everybody else up (the ones involved in the escape attempt). He had to make the most of the times available, taking into account guards changing and moonrise and so on. Oh, and no alarm clocks around of course (too noisy anyway!).
He used to tap his head against the pillow three times, if he needed to get up at 3 a.m. Sounds too easy, I thought, so I tried it and it worked. The weird thing is how accurate it can be, I mean to the exact minute.
I've used it time and again, and found that just visualising getting up and seeing that time on the clock does the trick too. It seems the brain has an inbuilt clock (like a computer, I suppose) and is aware of the time, even when you're asleep.
I guess what you did was imagine getting up at three o'clock, like in the film, and that was enough to do the trick. Nothing supernatural about it, but still weird!
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