Emana Mana Jurano Tila-oyata Sununa . Q... - Yadi Ghuma Na Ase

When sleep refuses to come, the instinct is often to reach for screens, count failures, or replay the day’s regrets. But the old advice suggests otherwise: sununa — listen. Listen not for an answer, but for a presence. The til-oyata is not a song with lyrics or a clear beginning and end. It is a texture of sound, a warm blanket for the auditory senses. Sleep is not a switch; it is a tide. And the tide does not rise under force. Modern science confirms what the proverb implies: chasing sleep chases it away. Insomnia often stems from an overactive default mode network—the part of the brain responsible for self-referential thoughts and rumination. "Yadi ghuma na ase" ( if sleep does not come ) is not a failure. It is a condition, like rain falling upward. You do not stop the rain; you open an umbrella.

And if sleep still does not come? Then you have not failed. You have simply listened longer than the night expected. Let the til-oyata carry what counting sheep cannot. yadi ghuma na ase emana mana jurano tila-oyata sununa . Q...

"Yadi ghuma na ase emana mana jurano tila-oyata sununa." If sleep does not come, listen to such mind-soothing til-oyata. When sleep refuses to come, the instinct is