There's something deeply calming about drifting through the solar system at night. Not rushing. Not cramming facts. Just wandering among distant moons and silent storms, letting the scale of space quiet the noise in your mind. This is a two-hour journey through our solar system—not the one from textbooks, but the one that lives in wonder and time. We'll move slowly through a hundred soft facts: oceans hidden beneath ice, storms older than civilizations, moons drifting away at the speed your fingernails grow. Each fact is told like a small story, with room to breathe, room to let your thoughts soften and blur. These aren't just astronomical details. They're invitations to perspective—reminders that you're part of something vast and ancient, that the ground beneath you is a planet spinning through darkness, that light takes time to travel and everything you see in the sky is already gone, already past. There's comfort in that kind of scale. It makes daily worries feel smaller, more temporary, easier to release. This video is designed specifically for sleep. The pacing is slow and contemplative. The narration is warm and never rushed. There are no sudden loud moments, no jarring transitions—just a gentle flow from one cosmic fact to the next, like watching stars drift across a dark sky. You don't need to remember any of this. You don't need to stay awake. The goal is to let curiosity and rest exist together, to learn a little and sleep a lot, to find that soft edge where wonder becomes dreaming. Whether you're here for astronomy, for sleep, or just for a few moments of quiet in a loud world—welcome. Let the solar system hold you tonight. If this kind of long-form, sleep-friendly exploration resonates with you, consider subscribing. We create these extended journeys through science, history, and wonder, all told at a pace that respects your need for rest. And if there's a topic you'd love to fall asleep to, leave it in the comments. No pressure. Just an invitation. Sleep well. The planets will still be there in the morning.