Episodes

  • Introducing “Try This”
    Nov 16 2023

    Meet The Washington Post’s Cristina Quinn, who is always game to try something new. She is your guide in “Try This” — a new series of audio courses from The Post that will provide quick, fresh and practical approaches to tackling the kind of hurdles we all face: how to sleep better, get the most out of our relationships, get out of our own way and more. Follow “Try This” now so you catch the first course when it drops Tuesday, Dec. 5.

    Show More Show Less
    2 mins
  • Stop trying to fall asleep
    Dec 5 2023

    In this first class of our course on how to get better sleep, host Cristina Quinn outlines why trying to get yourself to sleep can sometimes be a barrier to getting rest. But if we shouldn't will ourselves to sleep, what should we do instead? Cristina talks to an expert with a clear plan for how to tackle anxiety at bedtime by taking some tangible steps during the day.


    If you’d like additional resources, here are some columns from sleep expert Lisa Strauss who is featured in this episode:

    • Overthinking at night? 6 strategies for better sleep.
    • Three ways to fix sleep issues when nothing else works


    Subscribe to The Washington Post and connect your subscription in Apple Podcasts.

    Show More Show Less
    9 mins
  • Go ahead. Think about the thing that’s keeping you up.
    Dec 5 2023

    Lying awake at night, ruminating over stuff that bothers you is not fun. But it’s normal! We’ve all done it and it can get in the way of the rest you need. In class 2 of our course on how to sleep better, Cristina walks us through how trying to suppress your difficult feelings from popping up at night might be counterproductive. Sleep expert Lisa Strauss explains a technique for identifying and changing negative thought patterns. Consider this an exercise in compartmentalizing – a technique for preventing intrusive thoughts from taking over at bedtime.


    Subscribe to The Washington Post and connect your subscription in Apple Podcasts.

    Show More Show Less
    8 mins
  • What to do if you’re up in the middle of the night
    Dec 12 2023

    In class 3 of our course about how to get better sleep, we dig in on a moment most of us are familiar with – waking up in the middle of the night and not being able to fall back asleep. Sometimes our default setting is to keep thinking our endless thoughts, but, it turns out, what we really need is a distraction. And you want to make sure to find the right kind of distraction – one that requires little to no thinking or mental commitment. Cristina explores tips on how to do that and an accessory that can help.


    Here are some of Cristina’s favorite suggestions for soothing distractions that might work for you:

    • The autobiography of Eleanor Roosevelt
    • Rick Steves’s travel podcasts


    Subscribe to The Washington Post and connect your subscription in Apple Podcasts.

    Show More Show Less
    9 mins
  • Sleep is a ball of pizza dough
    Dec 19 2023

    In class 4 of our course on how to get better sleep, Cristina and sleep expert Lisa Strauss explore the concept of sleep drive. Counterintuitively, sometimes you need to increase your need for sleep, even if you’re exhausted already. Lisa Strauss explains a technique called sleep compression, where you limit your sleep opportunity to a more sustainable quantity – and you just might find the sweet spot for the amount that best suits your body over the long-term. What does this have to do with pizza? You’ll find out – and it will be delicious.


    Subscribe to The Washington Post and connect your subscription in Apple Podcasts.

    Show More Show Less
    10 mins
  • The melatonin factor
    Dec 26 2023

    In the fifth and final class of our course on how to get better sleep, we focus on melatonin. Researchers found that melatonin use in the United States more than quintupled between 1999 and 2018. You might know someone who swears by melatonin or maybe you yourself do. But does it work? What do we know about how effective melatonin supplements are, and what does it mean for helping you get better sleep? Cristina unpacks the research and helps you determine if melatonin is the right choice for your sleep needs.


    Here are some organizations and labels to look for when purchasing melatonin supplements:

    • National Sanitation Foundation
    • United States Pharmacopeia


    Read more from The Washington Post about how and when to take melatonin.


    Subscribe to The Washington Post and connect your subscription in Apple Podcasts.

    Show More Show Less
    14 mins
  • Are you socially fit?
    Apr 2 2024

    In the first class of our course on making the most of your friendships, host Cristina Quinn learns what it means to be socially fit — and why it’s never too late to start getting those reps in. Cristina talks to Bob Waldinger, director of the Harvard Study of Adult Development — the longest longitudinal study on human happiness — about why friendships matter for our health and what we can do to assess our connections. He gives practical advice for how to take stock of, reinvest in or rethink our relationships, with exercises that can work as an ongoing social fitness regimen.


    You can learn more about the Harvard Study of Adult Development here. Waldinger and his colleague wrote a book, “The Good Life,” that includes more tips for finding satisfaction in human relationships.


    Subscribe to The Washington Post and connect your subscription in Apple Podcasts.

    Show More Show Less
    14 mins
  • Why it pays to get out of your comfort zone
    Apr 9 2024

    In Class 2 of our course on friendship, you’ll learn how to get out of your comfort zone when it comes to fostering new friendships and resuscitating old ones. Cristina talks to Washington Post advice columnist Carolyn Hax about doable ways to make real-life connections at a time when technology makes that seem hard. Friendship expert Danielle Bayard Jackson makes the case that spending time with friends can be as simple as some shared errands. And Bob Waldinger is back to explain how we don’t always know what we actually want from interactions with other people. It turns out, we might surprise ourselves.


    For more advice on how to navigate all sorts of relationships, read columns by The Post’s Carolyn Hax.


    Subscribe to The Washington Post and connect your subscription in Apple Podcasts.

    Show More Show Less
    11 mins