no its harram
Sleeping in any position on Mount Everest is difficult but I very much doubt you would sleep feet pointing towards the summit. Most would try and sleep on their side or with their head upwards towards the summit.
well, they make a pilgrimage to Mecca. They travel from place to place and they sleep for a night in one place than travel to another, and they pray, they make dua, and ask for Allah to accept their repentence.
You should never sleep having head towards North. Best is to sleep towards South in Southwest or Northwest corner.
he cannot sleep nude with his wife in islam acording to me
Cows sleep lying with their front feet folded under and their back legs tucked under them, but so that either the left or right hip is resting on the ground (which ever side they prefer to lay on). They will either sleep with their head on the ground pointing towards their rear, or stretch out on their sides and sleep with their feet splayed out. Cows doze on their feet as they are chewing their cud, but they never sleep on their feet as their legs cannot lock like horses' do; plus their legs take a lot of weight, which makes it a very good excuse to lay down to rest for a while.
No, hajj is some trip every able Muslim has to do, if u are heallthy and can aford it. (to see the holy places ) don't know about the other Muslims, then the Turks, but its a big honor to be buried in Saudi IF u die while on hajj. ( accidents happen )
Abstaining from sex is not required in Ramadan. However a devout Muslim would never sleep with his girlfriend at any time, as sex outside of marriage is a serious sin; he would only sleep with his wife.
Laying down. They doze standing, but for a deep sleep, they lay down either on their side or with their feet tucked under them and their heads pulled in towards their rear.
Sleep "O Allah, I die and live with thy name on my lips."WakeAll praise to Allah Who has given me life after death and towards Whom is the return
A bat I was gonna say a vampire, but a bat works, too.
It is a sleep study which shows patterns other than those associated with normal sleep stages architecture. The lighter sleep stage is stage 2, and the deeper stages are 3 and 4, followed by a brief period of REM sleep, before the sleep cycle repeats itself. A healthy night's sleep typically includes five 90 minute sleep cycles. A common abnormal sleep study is one which is associated with multiple apneic episodes, pointing to sleep apnea as a problem (which limits the body's ability to attain the deeper stages of sleep, hence the fatigue and sleepiness the next day despite the subjective perception that one has slept for eight hours or more).
Barbara G. Ronson has written: 'Towards an understanding of early childhood sleep problems'