When I can’t sleep, I turn around and sleep “upside down” - moving my pillows to where my feet were beforehand, and my feet to where my head was beforehand - and I stick with that for a week or so. It gives me a week or so without insomnia and then wears off, so I have to turn myself back around for the next 7-12 day period.

Admittedly this could just be a me thing, but let’s put our faith in this method and let the power of placebo effect take hold. Boom, minor bouts of sleeplessness are cured.

What are your own examples of this?

  • idunnololz@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    This is cooking advice.

    If you struggle with cooking or find that you mess up often, try preparing all of the individual ingredients before you start cooking. Eg. measure, wash, cut every ingredient. Apparently this practice is called mise en place.

    If you ever watch a cooking video and it looks so effortless this is probably why. It was a game changer back when I was learning to cook. Suddenly it felt like I could make every recipe with ease.

    This practice has drawbacks as it could dirty more dishes and increase cook times but it allows you to tackle most dishes at your own pace. I definitely recommend it whenever you make something new for the first time.

    • Thebular@lemmy.world
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      6 days ago

      Mise en place is essential in my mind and one of the most important skills I learned early on in culinary school. At home if you don’t want to dirty a ton of dishes, you can organize ingredients (veggie ones anyway, still need bowls for spices/liquids) into small piles on your cutting board. Then just grab a bench scraper or the side of your knife and toss the ingredients in as needed.

      Also, get a kitchen scale. You won’t need it all the time but it’s so much easier to just stick a pot on top of a scale and add 500 ml of chicken stock than it is to have to measure 2 cups in a separate container. This is especially good if you’re looking to blanche/simmer something in a flavorful liquid like stock or broth

  • Horsey@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    If you’re walking with an open container of liquid that’s filled so full it’ll spill, purposefully avert your gaze from the liquid sloshing as you’re walking.

    Getting nervous that you’ll spill, will cause you to spill.

  • anon_8675309@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    Here’s how I quit smoking about 15 years ago.

    Step one: for about a month, every time I smoked I told myself I’m ready to quit. Every cigarette, every time.

    Step two: the next month, every cigarette, every time, I told myself they stink and taste like shit.

    Took about 3 weeks into the second month and I never picked up another. Oh and I can be around other smokers and don’t crave them. They still fucking stink.

    YMMV

      • mic_check_one_two@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        6 days ago

        Honestly, quit as soon as you can. After the two week mark, you’ll start smelling things again. At the one month mark, you’ll notice that you’re not constantly out of breath. Cravings still occasionally happen, but it shifts from “god damn it I need a donut right now” to “hmm a donut sounds good right now… But I don’t wanna bother with going to the donut shop.” The cravings never fully vanish, but they definitely change and become easier to dismiss as a passing whim.

    • Something like 20 years ago now, my pack-a-day wife decided to try a vaper. Not clouds-of-vape, just a pedestrian vaper.

      She never went back to cigarettes. She decreased the nicotine and nowadays vapes maybe 2-3 times per day, I think her current level is 6… whatever units of nicotine, it’s not a lot.

      I don’t care that she still vapes at that level. If there is anything bad, it’s not much at that rate, so screw it.

    • untorquer@lemmy.world
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      6 days ago

      I realized it was causing a lot of anxiety for me. Easy quit after that because the reward was less anxiety after a few days.

  • Canopyflyer@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    If someone is about to sneeze, wait until they begin to inhale and say something unexpected to them and it will stop them from sneezing.

    I told this to my wife and she scoffed and didn’t believe me. One day her allergies were kicking up and she started to sneeze. I waited for the right moment and said “GRAPEFRUIT” to her and… She didn’t sneeze.

    The secret is timing it correctly.

    • Addv4@lemmy.world
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      6 days ago

      Also, if you’re having trouble sneezing (starting but unable to fully sneeze), try looking at a light source when you start sneezing. Conversely, looking away from a light might help you not sneeze as well, but it isn’t much of a guarantee.

      • Canopyflyer@lemmy.world
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        6 days ago

        That’s true!

        It’s the reason why you tend to sneeze after coming out from watching a movie and it’s still light outside. From what I have read, it’s a reflex to give your eyes time to adjust to the brighter lighting conditions.

  • undeffeined@lemmy.ml
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    6 days ago

    Hiccups: repeat in your head “I don’t have hiccups, hiccups don’t exist”. Repeat these phrases a few times and the hiccups should be gone.

    It has worked everytime since I learned this a couple of years ago.

  • Katana314@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    When microwaving a thick food, like pasta, there’sa risk of the “deepest” part being cold from lack of microwave penetration. Shift the contents of the plate into a donut shape, so most of it is on the sides and a gap in the center, before microwaving. That helps the heat penetrate evenly.

    • HugeNerd@lemmy.ca
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      6 days ago

      You mean it creates a thinner section for the induction currents to set up. There is no heat that penetrates in a microwave, it’s an induction oven. It’s the meal itself that generates the heat.

  • Hiccups? Try taking a moment to close your eyes, focus your attention to the sides of your neck, and remind yourself that you don’t have gills anymore. I read this a few years ago and it mostly works for me - about 80% of the time (not that I get hiccups often). I’ve spread it to others with about ⅔ success, ⅓ failiure.

    I’ve read the theory that it’s our brain in a panic because our gills (that we haven’t had for millions of years) aren’t working, so reminding yourself they’re not there helps. At least sometimes, at least some poeple.

  • Krudler@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    To cure hiccups:

    Hyperventilate for about 30 seconds; breathe out until your lungs feel like they’re going to implode; Without intaking breath, smoothly chug a 12oz glass of water.

    It will “reset” your spasming diaphragm and stop the hiccups.

  • Kcap@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    Toast your bagels whole! Sprinkle a little water on the exterior of the bagel and then pop it in the oven. The crust will be crispy, but the interior will be a steamy almost gooey consistency. It’s such a better experience than it being all dried out and crunchy atop. Trust.

    • FinjaminPoach@lemmy.worldOP
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      6 days ago

      You’re completely right. I’ve had some which just cook like that anyway, and they’re blissful compared to the curnchu toasted ones. I’ll be ttying this with every bagel from now on

  • HugeNerd@lemmy.ca
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    6 days ago

    People on public transit (trance it) are in automatic mode and basically in a trance. They’re blocking your way? Just shove them out of the way. Pro tip: give kids and the elderly a pass.

    • FinjaminPoach@lemmy.worldOP
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      6 days ago

      They’re blocking your way? Just shove them out of the way.

      That would be profoundly un-british of me. I did nudge someone out of the way once in a crowded space and, akthough he forgsve me, i kept on getting weird looks from my superior for the next few months, which i chalk up to them thinking I’m an asshole. I also onoy did it because i thought they were deliberately ignoring me

      • HugeNerd@lemmy.ca
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        5 days ago

        I would humbly suggest that the people thronging in the door before letting other people out forfeit their right to Britishness.

    • While most probably would be okay with hydrating more, do be careful:

      1. The “eight glasses per day” thing was made up whole cloth
      2. The advice I’ve heard is that for MOST people, drink when you are thirsty.

      But if you’re trying to figure out what’s wrong because you feel a little bad, or have a headache, or are sleepy, or feel like you might be hungry but think you shouldn’t be, or any number of other situations - drinking a glass of water usually doesn’t hurt, and does sometimes turn out to have been the issue. So it’s rarely terrible advice.

      (Unless you’re on dialysis like me and have fluid restrictions) :)

    • W98BSoD@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      6 days ago

      The only software holding me back is Adobe Premeire Pro; I’ve looked at the Linux alternatives and one of them has a windows 3.11 interface (KDEVine I think).

      I’m still open to suggestions.

      • hikaru755@lemmy.world
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        6 days ago

        You could try Davinci Resolve. It’s great, professional-grade software, runs natively on Linux, and has a very generous free version and an inexpensive, one-time purchase studio version.

      • Smoogs@lemmy.world
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        6 days ago

        Will it work with wine?

        I personally just went with blender sequencer because it is free softare though quite basic. Nuke might be a paid option. It is node based tho.

    • Bustedknuckles@lemmy.world
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      8 days ago

      One weird trick! Terminal still scares me as well as installing from GitHub, but I have win11 required at work and mint at home and the speed and ease of use are like night and day

        • corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
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          8 days ago

          Switched to codeberg as well

          I’m using gitlab-on-prem for now, until their slow code decay and creeping featurism destroys it completely. It’s only barely usable now because of the really dumb CI/runner changes, for example, but forgejo uses a yaml CI setup so that’s never happening.

            • corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
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              6 days ago

              Its build/install fails best practice and ISO in so many places that I simply cannot.

              But thank you for sending that over. I’ve never heard of that app, and I’m grateful for the consideration.

    • papalonian@lemmy.world
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      7 days ago

      I really want to and was mostly Windows free for most of 2025 but I can’t get my new graphics card to perform well in either kubuntu or mint. Games that will run on ultra at over 100fps in Windows will get 60-80fps on medium-high settings on kubuntu. A tear runs down my cheek every time I see people say they got performance increases from switching. Even my old hardware performed slightly worse.

      • AdrianTheFrog@lemmy.world
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        7 days ago

        Linux performance improvements are most noticeable on lower end hardware, at the higher end performance VS windows is usually pretty random from what I’ve seen.

      • mnemonicmonkeys@sh.itjust.works
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        7 days ago

        Ubuntu and its derivatives are very slow with updates because they’re more focussed on stability. Because of this, your graphics drivers are likely wildly out of date. And if you’re using an Nvidia GPU, you’re better off going with a distro that has the graphics drivers built in.

        I recommended going for a distro based on Fedora like Bazzite or Nobara. Fedora only lags a couple weeks behind updates for testing and QA, unlike the months/years you get on Ubuntu. Plus the 2 distros I mentioned have built-in Nvidia graphics drivers

        • papalonian@lemmy.world
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          7 days ago

          I’m running an AMD GPU (9070XT) specifically because I knew it was meant to work nicer with Linux than my 1080 did.

          I might give some other distros a try when I’ve got the time. It’s a shame, I really liked kubuntu. (I know I can configure most distros to do the things I liked about kubuntu but I’m not the most knowledgeable when it comes to that kind of thing.)

          • Whitebrow@lemmy.world
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            7 days ago

            Running a 9070xt on cachyOS, works great

            If memory serves you basically need the kernel release and stuff from like, December 2025? Somebody can correct me if that’s inaccurate.

            • papalonian@lemmy.world
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              6 days ago

              I just installed CachyOS based off this recommendation, and performance is absolutely terrible right after installing. Do I need to install any drivers or change settings? Everything I see says that the drivers are baked into the kernel. But I am getting <50FPS with extreme stutters running the same settings I had on all the other OS’es I listed.

              • Whitebrow@lemmy.world
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                6 days ago

                Drivers should be baked into the kernel, yeah, assuming the latest version was installed and regular updates ran after install to make sure all is up to date

                Only extra thing I installed was the command that gave me steam and all the related gaming stuff, was a single line with gaming meta in it iirc.

                What were you trying to test and on what resolution?

                • papalonian@lemmy.world
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                  6 days ago

                  The game I’ve been playing lately is the Oblivion remaster. I know the game is known to have subpar performance, but in Windows with ultra settings and RT set to low I get 130+ FPS outdoors and 180+ indoors, in kubuntu I was getting ~60-80 outdoors and ~100 indoors, CachyOS got me 80 indoors and 50 outdoors with extreme stuttering.

                  All running on my 3440x1440 144hz monitor.

                  I just installed Bazzite, we’ll see how that plays.

          • mnemonicmonkeys@sh.itjust.works
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            7 days ago

            I’m running an AMD GPU (9070XT)

            Yeah, the newer card likely doesn’t have drivers added to the kernel version that Kubuntu uses yet

            If it helps, Bazzite and Nobara have options to install with KDE Plasma included