Sleep Hypnosis & Bedtime Stories: Your Ticket to Snoozeville
Your Ticket to Snoozeville is a soothing sanctuary for those who can't sleep, offering sleep hypnosis, guided sleep meditations, and gentle inspiration to help you drift off into deep sleep. Each episode combines proven relaxation techniques with sleep hypnosis for sleep, designed to help you calm down and release the day's stresses.
Whether you're struggling with insomnia, overthinking, anxiety, or wondering what to do when you can't sleep, these sleep meditations provide the guidance and peace you're seeking. From bedtime stories for adults to 'how to fall asleep fast' techniques, let this caring voice be your gentle companion as you navigate toward restful sleep through the power of meditation and sleep therapy.
Hosted by a trained hypnotherapist with a broadcasting background, each episode is crafted with genuine care for those who struggle with sleepless nights. Her mission is simple: to provide comfort, understanding, and effective techniques to help you find the peaceful rest you deserve.
Sleep Hypnosis & Bedtime Stories: Your Ticket to Snoozeville
A New Sleep Method for Restless ADHD Minds | Ad Free
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There is a reason your ADHD mind resists sleep, and tonight we are going to fix that. This episode introduces a simple but genuinely effective new sleep method for releasing the tension and mental noise that keeps ADHD minds awake. It works with your brain rather than against it. The result is deeper, more restorative sleep — and fewer nights lost to insomnia. You will also learn something practical you can use every night on your own, long after this episode ends.
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All content by Your Ticket to Snoozeville is for educational and entertainment purposes only and does not replace or provide professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your medical professional before making any changes to your treatment, and if in any doubt, contact your doctor. Please listen in a place where you can safely go to sleep. Your Ticket to Snoozeville is not responsible or liable for any loss, damage, or injury arising from the use of this content.
We know most people wind down naturally as the evening arrives. Their thoughts slow, their body grows heavy, they feel their tiredness, and they follow it to bed. For ADHD brains, and for anyone whose mind tends to run fast, that process gets interrupted. And it's not just that your thoughts are loud, though they often are; it's something else.
Your brain has been working incredibly hard today: scanning, processing, jumping from one thing to another. In doing all of that, it pulled your attention almost entirely upward, into thought, into plans, into everything that happened and everything that hasn't happened yet. Which means your body has been down there doing its job all day: building up tiredness, carrying tension, sending its little signals... and your brain has simply not been picking up the calls.
There's actually a word for the brain's ability to sense what's happening inside the body. It's called 'interoception.' Research shows that for fast-moving minds, that particular connection can be a little quieter than it is for other people, not broken, just harder to hear over all the other noise. The tiredness is there. It always has been there. Your body has been doing its job faithfully all night; you just haven't been able to feel it yet.
And that is exactly what tonight is all about. Not fighting your mind, not forcing anything—just helping you tune back to what your body has already been telling you. Reconnecting, slowly and gently, with the signals that are there waiting for you.
The way that we're going to do that is with something called a 'weighted blanket technique.' It's not an actual weighted blanket—though if you have one, by all means, pile it on—just the sensation of one, built through breath and attention, layer by layer, until your body feels held, and heavy, and genuinely, finally heard.
And then, we're going to step outside together into a rainy night garden for some hypnotherapy that will take you the rest of the way to sleep.
Before we begin, make sure that you are somewhere safe to fall asleep. This episode uses hypnotherapy and relaxation techniques designed to take you into deep sleep, so you want to be in your comfortable bed. There is a full disclaimer in the show notes. And if this podcast is something you come back to—if it helps on the hard nights—please follow or subscribe to the show. We know hypnotherapy works better with repetition. The more you listen, the more your nervous system will learn to recognize these episodes as a signal that it's safe to let go. You're essentially training your brain to relax on cue, which means following this podcast is technically a sleep intervention. You're welcome.
Take a moment to find the position your body likes best tonight. Adjust your pillow, pull your blanket up, or kick a foot out if you're warm. Let your hips sink into the mattress. Let your shoulders drop. Take your time with this; there's genuinely no hurry.
Let's start by taking a deep breath in now... nice and easy and slow. And when you breathe out, notice how your body feels against the mattress. The weight of it. The warmth of it.
And then, I would like you to imagine a blanket being laid across you right now. It's not heavy yet. Imagine it soft and warm, settling across your collarbone, your shoulders, the top of your chest. Notice where it makes contact. The warmth of it. The gentle pressure. It's there. Just let it be there.
When your body experiences this kind of gentle, steady pressure—the kind that a weighted blanket provide. It triggers a response in your nervous system. Your heart rate will start to drop, your breathing will deepen, and your muscles get the message that they can let go. Your nervous system can't always tell what's real and what's imaginary, and that's why the heaviness of this blanket is telling your body to let go.
Breathe in again. A nice, long, deep breath into your lungs. And as you breathe out, feel the blanket settle a little more. Still gentle, still soft, but slightly heavier now—the way a good blanket feels when you've been under it for a while and it has warmed you. Notice your chest rising and falling beneath it, the weight moving with you. Imagining this blanket is not something you need to try very hard at. Just allow it. Let the weight be enough.
Breathe in again... and then out. A beautiful, long, deep breath out.
The blanket is heavier now. Not just your chest and shoulders, but your arms too. The warmth and the heaviness move slowly, like something gentle being poured past your elbows, along your forearms, into your hands, your fingers. Feel your hands become heavy. Just resting. Just warm. Just still.
Each exhale adds weight. Each inhale is easy. Your chest rises without effort beneath the blanket. Notice your hands right now. Really notice them. Whether they are cooler at the fingertips or warmer at the palm. Whether you can feel the slight pulse of your own heartbeat in them. Most people never do this. Most people go entire days without once noticing what their hands actually feel like.
Breathe in... and then out again. Enjoy the sensation of your breath leaving your body with that long, extended exhale.
The blanket moves downward now, across your stomach, your hips. Feel the heaviness settle there—the broad, solid weight of it. Your stomach rises and falls with each breath, and the blanket moves with it. You may notice that your breathing has slowed without you even trying. Your body made that adjustment on its own; it has been waiting to do exactly this.
Let your attention move to your legs now. That warm, heavy blanket has reached your thighs, and then your knees, your shins. Heavy and warm. Your feet... feel the weight across the tops of your feet, across your toes.
Breathe in... and out.
You are here now. You are fully here. You are not in tomorrow, not in whatever happened today. Here. In this body. Under this weight. For a mind like yours, arriving here—truly arriving—is not always easy, but you have done it tonight.
The blanket is fully across you now. Every part of you is held. Every part is warm. The weight is not confining. Under it, you know exactly where you are. You can feel your own edges, your own warmth, your own breathing. And within that, you are safe. You are still.
And you remember this feeling, because you can come back to it anytime you need to. On any night, in any moment when your mind is loud, when your body feels far away, you can close your eyes, take a slow breath, and imagine this blanket settling over you. The weight of it. The warmth of it.
Tonight, your nervous system shifted from alert to at rest. Your heart rate slowed, your breathing deepened, your muscles released—not because you forced any of it, but because you gave your body your attention. And your body knew exactly what to do with that gift.
And here you are: heavy, held, already—without quite knowing what happened—more than halfway to sleep.
In a moment, I'm going to take you somewhere. You don't have to try very hard. Just let my words arrive and let whatever images come, come. All you have to do right now is to follow the sound of my voice. No effort required.
It's a rainy night. Not a storm, but just a steady, quiet rain that has been falling for hours and shows no sign of stopping. A good kind of rain. The kind that settles in and gets comfortable.
The first thing you notice is the smell of it—a clean, dark, earthy smell that rain brings with it. You know it the moment it reaches you. Everyone does. It's the smell of the ground getting what it needs and of everything outside exhaling. Take a breath and let it reach you.
And listen... because rain is never just one sound. On the window glass, it's soft and close—each drop its own small tap. On the roof, it's fuller, deeper—a steady rumble that rises and falls. On the broad leaves of the garden plants, it breaks apart into something softer still, less regular, more like a whisper. All of it happening at once. Steady and unhurried.
The garden outside is dark, and wet, and alive. The grass is deeply, richly green. Every surface holds water: the leaves, the soil, the wooden edge of the garden bed. All of it dark and glistening. The flowerbeds smell of wet earth. Cold, clean air moves gently through everything.
And there, toward the back of the garden, is a sunflower.
It's been a long day for this sunflower. You can see it in the way it stands: a big, heavy head tipped forward, the thick stem doing everything it can to hold things upright. The rain has been falling for hours and the sunflower is doing its best. There's a tension to it—a bracing. The whole plant is leaning slightly into the effort of just staying upright.
You know that feeling. As the day piles on—the interruptions, the unexpected demands, the thoughts that just won't slow down—your body does something very similar without you even realizing it. Your shoulders start to creep up, little by little. Your jaw tightens. Muscles across your neck and back quietly hold on. And because your mind is so busy, so full, it simply doesn't notice. The body keeps sending its signals and the mind is always somewhere else.
It happens to most people. It happens most when your mind runs fast. And it's worth remembering on ordinary days to check in; to just take a breath, a quick notice of where your shoulders are, whether your jaw is tight. It takes almost no time, and your body will thank you for it. A busy mind needs reminding to come home to the body now and then—especially at night. Especially when you're trying to sleep.
Now, look toward the far edge of the garden where a birch tree stands. Tucked in where two branches meet, there is a bird... a wren. Tiny, barely bigger than a walnut, round as a little ball. Its feathers are fluffed out to hold in warmth. It is so completely asleep that the rain moving through the branches all around it doesn't register at all. It found its spot before the rain came, and here it is: dry, warm, and fast asleep while the whole wet night goes on without it. All that rain, all that dark... and it's just one tiny, round creature, completely unbothered, sleeping the best sleep imaginable in its dry corner of the world.
And that's you tonight. Warm and still.
Everything in this garden has done its work today. Grass grew. The soil held. The little wren flew and fed and called out with that enormous voice it carries in that tiny body. And the sunflower stood upright from morning until now, face turned to whatever light it could find.
They are all resting now, each one in its own way. The grass is flat and still. The birch is quiet between gusts. The wren is a small, warm ball of sleep. The sunflower is finally, gently letting its heavy head down.
And soon, the rain will stop. Maybe tonight, maybe toward morning. And when it does, something will change in the air. It will be lighter, cleaner. That stillness that comes after rain, when everything is washed and the world feels new.
In the morning, the sun will come. It always does. When it arrives, it will find a garden that is ready for it. The grass will lift. The soil will begin to warm. Somewhere up in the branches, the little bird will open one bright eye, decide that morning is acceptable, and announce this loudly to everyone within fifty feet—because wrens do not wait quietly. They wake with their whole heart.
That will happen. All of that will happen. But that is morning, and morning is not now.
Now, there is only the rain, the dark garden drinking, the sleeping bird, the smell of wet earth, and you—inside, warm and still under your blanket. You came to this tonight with a mind that was busy. It will be busy again tomorrow and the day after, doing all the things it does so well. But tonight, you gave it something different. Tonight, you listened to your body. You felt the weight of the blanket. You noticed your hands. You breathed with the rain. You remembered that underneath all the noise and speed and motion of a day, there is a body that has been carrying you through it all.
Right now, there is only the rain on the glass and your body—warm and heavy. Your breathing... the day is finished. It is done, and it was enough.
Feel the weight of your blanket, the warmth underneath it, the softness of your pillow, the way your bed supports you completely. Your eyes are closed. Your face is soft. Your jaw is loose. Your hands are still.
Your thoughts are quieting now. Not gone—they will be back, they always come back, that's just how your mind works and it is a good mind—but right now, your thoughts are slow, and soft, and far away. Like lights going off in a building: one by one, floor by floor, until only the rain is left.
You are so close now. The bird is asleep in its dry, warm corner. The sunflower has set down its heavy head. The garden is resting. And you... you are doing the same.
Sleep is here. It's been here all along, patiently waiting for you to arrive. I'm Suzanne, and this is your ticket to Snoozeville.
Sleep now. Sleep deeply. Sleep well.