Throughout my life, I’ve tried a bunch of U-shaped travel pillows—the ones that go around your neck—and frankly, they have all sucked. But recently I slept seven hours (seven!) in the middle seat of a long-haul flight with Travelrest's Nest. Normally I’d feel like a defeated Rock ’Em Sock ’Em Robot if I blinked too slowly, but I woke up feeling refreshed. It wasn’t the first time, either.
More than anything, it was the shape I noticed first. Most travel pillows look like puffy donuts with a bite taken out in the front. The sides are often too low and the foam too squishy to keep the neck firmly upright in any direction. The bulging pillow pushes the back of the neck away from the seat, so the pillow ends up forcing you into a slouch, and the lack of cushion under the chin lets your head droop forward when you nod off. All your vacation pictures have you stooped over like Quasimodo because of your sore neck.
The Travelrest solves the first problem by making the rear of the pillow flat so it lets you rest upright against the seat back without slouching you forward. Rubber strips on the flat surface keep the pillow from slipping. It also covers the entire 360 degrees of the wearer's neck. You just slip your head in through the gap at the front and then use the hook-and-loop fastener to close the gap. No more forward neck droop.
The Travelrest is much more sculpted to hold the neck upright than a typical neck pillow. The high sides reach up and cup the chin all the way around. Without feeling claustrophobic, the Nest holds the head without leaving much wiggle room, so even as you doze off, your head is held fairly upright. Being able to relax my neck muscles entirely is a huge boon.


