
Want to find the perfect gift for the person who has everything – everything, that is, except a solid night’s sleep on a regular basis? Check out our list of top ideas:
1. Bedtime Beats – For the music lover, this 2-disc set of classical music was inspired by a study that found listening to jazz or classical music that cycles at 60-80 beats per minute prior to bedtime leads to a more satisfying, lasting sleep. ($18.98 by Smash Arts, LLC)
2. Tranquil Moments Sound Therapy Machine – This travel-safe sound therapy machine’s programs are based on brainwave frequencies that help you sleep or deeply relax, depending on the program you choose. It features auto-shutoff and also functions as an alarm clock. ($99.95 at Brookstone)
3. Insomnia Relief Aromatherapy Kit – Positive Thinking Remedy – Researchers have found that a sniff of lavender before bed helped study participants sleep more deeply. This kit includes an essential oil scent inhaler, two travel-size bath salts, and a body spritzer. ($19.50 at Earth Solutions)
4. Contour Cloud Pillow – This curved pillow helps support the neck and spine by cradling the neck, ushering in restful, relaxed sleep. The company claims users wake up feeling well rested and pain free. ($29.99-$69.99 by Contour Living)
5. NapForm Eye Mask – This mask completely blocks out light and creates a soothing eye pillow for home or travel. ($35.00 at Brookstone)

Photo compliments of MyZeo.com
Feel like you tossed and turned all night? Want to know for sure? The Personal Sleep Coach by Zeo, Inc. monitors your sleep activity and provides feedback in a bedside display.
Created by sleep-deprived students at Brown University, the Zeo Personal Sleep Coach uses a headband equipped with sensors to measure the electrical signals produced by your brain as you sleep, providing you a wealth of information about your sleep length and quality. According to the company, this is the first time this type of information has been available to the home consumer.
Information gathered by the headband is fed nightly into the Zeo bedside display. In the morning, you can take a look at the data, which includes among other things, the time it took you to fall asleep, total amount of REM, light and deep sleep you achieved and Your ZQ, which the company describes as a scoring system to help you quickly gauge the quality and quantity of your nightly sleep.
The display also doubles as an alarm clock and has an optional SmartWake feature, that helps decrease morning grogginess by awakening you at a “natural waking point” in your sleep, generally within a half hour of your designated time.
The coaching part comes in when you pull the SD memory card out of the bedside display and upload the data from your computer into the personal sleep coaching area of Zeo’s website. The site gives you access to your own online sleep journal and tools to help you spot the connections between your daily activities and choices and the quality of your sleep.
The headband and bedside display retail for $249. You can also choose to get unlimited access to guided coaching and sleep fitness assessments to your package for $349.