"People who favor the fetal position often present a tough exterior to the world while harboring surprising sensitivity inside. They're the colleagues who seem unshakeable during presentations but later admit they were terrified. They're cautious with new people but fiercely loyal once you've earned their trust. I've interviewed dozens of high-achieving professionals who sleep this way, and they all share a similar pattern: they take time to warm up but become incredibly open once comfortable."
"Last night, around 2 billion people curled up on their sides to sleep, another billion sprawled on their backs, and roughly 500 million brave souls planted themselves face-down on their stomachs. What they probably didn't realize? According to researchers, the way they positioned their bodies revealed more about their inner selves than hours of personality tests ever could. I stumbled onto this fascinating connection between sleep positions and personality traits while battling my own insomnia during a particularly brutal deadline season."
Around 3.5 billion people adopt distinct sleep positions that correlate with personality traits. A personal insomnia-driven investigation into sleep research revealed links beyond simple sleep duration advice. About 40% sleep in the fetal position, often showing a tough exterior while harboring inner sensitivity, cautiousness with strangers, and fierce loyalty once trust forms. Interviews with high-achieving professionals who sleep curled up showed patterns of warming up over time and increased openness when comfortable. Back sleepers, sometimes called the "soldier," represent roughly 8% and are associated with confidence and composed presentation.
Read at Silicon Canals
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