ChatterBank21 mins ago
Can't Sleep For Good Reasons
21 Answers
I am having trouble sleeping at night. It's not the usual worrying or anything like that, in fact, it's the opposite.
Apart from my health issues, which I just get on with, I have absolutely nothing to worry about, I enjoy my life, have a great , loving family, and have loads to look forward to.
This is what's keeping me awake! I'm like a child looking forward to an outing, I toss and turn waiting for morning so I can get on with all the nice things I have planned.
But of course by morning I'm exhausted.
Strange one,I know, any thoughts?
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The tv and iPad won't help - it is advisable to avoid sources of blue light around bed time, as it interferes with sleep. Exercise, if possible, is helpful. As Buenchico says, something calming, like reading, is ideal - it provides a distraction from your mind racing, but you can fall asleep whilst doing it (avoid hardbacks if you might drop them on your face :). I find focusing on just lying still in the dark and focusing on breathing usually works, not worrying if sleep is not instant (as lying still and being calm is restful in itself) and telling myself that the sooner I go to sleep the sooner I can get up, rested and ready to enjoy the day.
You can also get clocks that have a timer, so the light is dimmed over a period from on to off when you go to bed. The light gradually dimming aids in going to sleep. They can be set to work the opposite way for waking up.
You can also get clocks that have a timer, so the light is dimmed over a period from on to off when you go to bed. The light gradually dimming aids in going to sleep. They can be set to work the opposite way for waking up.
Perhaps you could try to find a music source, played low, that'd stop your mind wandering with thoughts of anticipation of exciting events tomorrow, which are preventing you slipping into a state of relaxation and ultimately sleep. Needs to be pleasant enough to stop the mind wandering but low enough and soothing enough that you don't start anticipating or analysing it. You just relax and drop off. Or maybe other soundtracks can do the same thing. Waves washing onto the shore, babbling streams, rain falling, whatever.
sleeping for a few hours, waking for a couple more, then sleeping again used to be quite common a few centuries ago. People would just visit the neighbours, have sex, read the Bible, whatever, then go back to bed when they were tired again
"What would our sleeping patterns be in the sort of ideal sense? Well, it turns out that when people are living without any sort of artificial light at all, they sleep twice every night. They go to bed around 8:00 p.m. until midnight and then again, they sleep from about 2:00 a.m. until sunrise. And in-between, they have a couple of hours of sort of meditative quiet in bed. And during this time, there's a surge of prolactin, the likes of which a modern day never sees. The people in these studies report feeling so awake during the daytime, that they realize they're experiencing true wakefulness for the first time in their lives."
http:// www.ted .com/ta lks/jes sa_gamb le_how_ to_slee p/trans cript?l anguage =en
The talk's here
http:// www.ted .com/ta lks/jes sa_gamb le_how_ to_slee p
Apparently one of the things is that if you think of it as normal rather than as an affliction, it all becomes less stressful - and you sleep better..
"What would our sleeping patterns be in the sort of ideal sense? Well, it turns out that when people are living without any sort of artificial light at all, they sleep twice every night. They go to bed around 8:00 p.m. until midnight and then again, they sleep from about 2:00 a.m. until sunrise. And in-between, they have a couple of hours of sort of meditative quiet in bed. And during this time, there's a surge of prolactin, the likes of which a modern day never sees. The people in these studies report feeling so awake during the daytime, that they realize they're experiencing true wakefulness for the first time in their lives."
http://
The talk's here
http://
Apparently one of the things is that if you think of it as normal rather than as an affliction, it all becomes less stressful - and you sleep better..
I have had this before.
Anticipation of something positive can keep you awake, although I would take that over stress and anxiety any day.
The usual advice - eat at regular times, exercise to your own ability, hydrate, cut down alcoholic drinks and sugars....
Take a book to bed or watch a bit of TV and try and concentrate on that rather than your over active thoughts!!
Failing that you can take it up a notch and introduce some medication, over the counter stuff such as tea's and Nytol etc.... But they are hit and miss and shouldn't be a long term solution as dependency can become an issue
Anticipation of something positive can keep you awake, although I would take that over stress and anxiety any day.
The usual advice - eat at regular times, exercise to your own ability, hydrate, cut down alcoholic drinks and sugars....
Take a book to bed or watch a bit of TV and try and concentrate on that rather than your over active thoughts!!
Failing that you can take it up a notch and introduce some medication, over the counter stuff such as tea's and Nytol etc.... But they are hit and miss and shouldn't be a long term solution as dependency can become an issue