The floor to ceiling coverage of the General Election may have you dozing off.
The seemingly never-ending story called Brexit might be sending you off to sleep.
And with Christmas starting to creep into our consciousness you may well feel in need of a lie-down.
But allow us to shatter a sleep myth. Counting sheep doesn’t work folks.
Another myth is that the property market in Keighley goes to sleep at this time of year, and then wakes up again in mid-January.
The truth is the property market locally has insomnia.
Yes, it certainly calms down in the run-up to an election or Christmas, but good estate agencies understand it never enters the realm of deep sleep if you know what you’re doing.
That’s because serious buyers are always out there, many want to be in their new homes in early 2020, so they are searching with real intent right now.
This means putting your property on the market in November gives you a great chance of getting in front of these wide-awake potential buyers.
There’s always a section of buyers who must move regardless of elections, political uncertainty or looming festive periods and seasonal shutdowns. And our database has plenty of them poised to leap out of bed should the right home become available.
Getting your property on the market now could prove to be your best decision of 2019.
But don’t lose sleep over it.
However, if you do struggle to get a good night’s sleep, you’ll find sweet dreams are made of these three top tips.
1) Have a regular bedtime and getting up time. (Easier said than done if you have small children).
2) Switch your phone off at 8 pm, swap your tablet / iPad for a book and let your brain and body unwind.
3) Avoid caffeine, alcohol and strenuous exercise before hitting the hay as these all stimulate parts of the mind and body that make drifting off into deep sleep much harder to achieve.
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Thanks for reading.
Disclaimer
The contents of this blog post is provided for general information purposes only and is not to be considered as legal advice. If such advice is needed readers should contact a solicitor. No responsibility for any information contained within this post is accepted and we accept no liability in respect of the contents or for action taken based on this post.