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How Good Sleep Became a Business

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How Good Sleep Became a Business

Sleep is a universal human need, but there’s no universal solution to struggling with it.

Keystone View / FPG / Getty

This is an edition of The Wonder Reader, a newsletter in which our editors recommend a set of stories to spark your curiosity and fill you with delight. Sign up here to get it every Saturday morning.

If you tell five people you have trouble sleeping, you’re likely to get suggestions for five items that you can purchase. “Sleep is going the way of other types of buyable ‘wellness,’” my colleague Megan Garber wrote last year.

As anyone who has tried sleep hacks or sleep gadgets knows, what works for you is a very personal thing. Sleep is a universal human need, but there’s no universal solution to struggling with it. And sometimes the problems behind bad sleep can’t be solved by a mask or an app at all. Today’s newsletter explores sleep hacks, old and new, and how they got so tied up in America’s consumer culture.


On Sleep Tools

Your Pillows Might Be Killing Your Neck

By Olga Khazan

After waking up with a searing pain that radiates down to my shoulders, I hunt for the culprit.

Read the article.

Why Everyone Should Sleep Alone

By Mallika Rao

On the virtues of splitting up for the night

Read the article.

The Protestant Sleep Ethic

By Megan Garber

A recent memoir considers how much we concede when we regard rest as a call to judgment.

Read the article.


Still Curious?


Other Diversions


P.S.

A group of crows
Courtesy of BD

I recently asked readers to share a photo of something that sparks their sense of awe in the world. BD, 73, in Nederland, Colorado, sent this photo of “watching beautiful crows on a cold winter day.”

I’ll continue to feature your responses in the coming weeks.

— Isabel

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