An Aboriginal performer plays the didgeridoo as Crown Prince Frederik of Denmark, his wife Princess Mary, Sydney Mayor Clover Moore, Danish Minister of Culture Brian Mikkelesen and Elaine Wexoe look in Sydney, in this March 7, 2005 file photo. Researchers in Switzerland found that those who played the unusual instrument over a four-month trial period saw a significant improvement in their daytime sleepiness and apnea. REUTERS/Will Burgess
Ping to a fun story...
Does "Rite Aid" sell them over the counter :-)
So I gotta choose between listening to that all day, or snoring all night?
most women wouldn't snore, if they had an interesting didgeredoo to contemplate. ;-)
I still haven't gotten the hand of circular breathing...but love the sound of these instruments.
Well,tie me kangaroo down sport! Someone very near and dear to me needs one of these! Amazon sell them?
Smacking your snoring spouse upside the head with a didgeradoo while she is asleep does sound effective.
I think you will find this is from the annual HUMOR issue of the BMJ and that no such study actually deprived volunteers of a safe and effective treatment (cpap) for four months while they played a didgeridoo!