I think a lot of people who have that skill learned it while serving in one military or another. Infantry(wo)men either learn to grab what rest they can when they can… or they don’t work out as infantry(wo)men.
Between serving in 'nam and working a labor-intensive job with as much overtime as her could get, my dad could sleep anywhere. Sometimes so hard it took a phone or alarm to wake him up, and he’d be moving and talking before his brain even shifted into gear.
The secret is to accept some level of discomfort in whatever situation while attempting to secure a subconsciously safe-feeling location, and then your tired brain will do the rest of the work getting you to sleep.
I’ve fallen into a deep REM sleep right next to a diesel turbine once (wearing ear protection of course).
I think a lot of people who have that skill learned it while serving in one military or another. Infantry(wo)men either learn to grab what rest they can when they can… or they don’t work out as infantry(wo)men.
Between serving in 'nam and working a labor-intensive job with as much overtime as her could get, my dad could sleep anywhere. Sometimes so hard it took a phone or alarm to wake him up, and he’d be moving and talking before his brain even shifted into gear.
The secret is to accept some level of discomfort in whatever situation while attempting to secure a subconsciously safe-feeling location, and then your tired brain will do the rest of the work getting you to sleep.
I’ve fallen into a deep REM sleep right next to a diesel turbine once (wearing ear protection of course).
Ranger school taught me that it’s ALWAYS better to get any rest, even 5 minutes, rather than trying to power through.
I still can’t sleep more than 6 hours at a time now though.