Why Your Nervous System Isn't Broken (Even When It Feels Like It)

Why Your Nervous System Isn't Broken (Even When It Feels Like It)

Here’s something that might surprise you:

How you feel the day after a rough night has a lot less to do with how much you slept - and a lot more to do with how you spent the hours you were awake.

When you spend the night fighting wakefulness - tensing up, ruminating, mentally begging your brain to shut off - that burns an enormous amount of energy.

But when you spend those same hours in a calmer state, even without sleeping much, you wake up with noticeably more in the tank.

Same amount of sleep. Very different the next day. That’s actually great news, because it means you have far more influence over how tomorrow feels than you thought.

The energy you didn’t know you could keep

Think of your nightly energy like a bank account. Every time you react to wakefulness with alarm - catastrophizing, tensing up, spiraling - you make a withdrawal. By morning, you’re overdrawn before the day even starts.

But as you learn to meet those wakeful hours with more calm and less resistance, you plug the leak. That conserved energy shows up the next day as more patience, more clarity, and a surprising sense of

“Huh, I actually feel okay.”

This builds in two stages. First, you learn to stop adding fuel to the fire. The racing heart might still happen, but you stop reacting to it with panic—and that alone makes a real difference in how you feel the next morning.

Second - and this comes with time - your nervous system actually starts to settle at night. There’s less fire to begin with. At that point, even a short night stops feeling like a crisis. It’s just a short night.

Making room for the hard parts

None of this means being awake at night becomes enjoyable. It's still uncomfortable, especially early on. You're going to feel anxiety, restlessness, frustration. That's part of the process.

But here's what changes the experience: expecting the discomfort before it arrives. When you walk into a rainstorm with an umbrella, the rain is the same, but you handle it differently.

Preemptively making room for discomfort takes the surprise out of it, and surprise is what triggers the biggest spikes in reactivity.

You won't always handle it gracefully. Some nights you'll accept the discomfort with calm. Other nights you'll be miserable and convinced nothing is working.

Both are completely normal.

What matters is holding the intention, even loosely, and trusting that your capacity to sit with discomfort grows over time.

Your body is doing exactly what a stressed nervous system does

If you've ever experienced your body jerking awake just as you drift off, your heart racing the moment you lie down, or waking suddenly in a state of alarm for no clear reason, you're not broken.

These are textbook signs of a nervous system stuck in alert mode.

The tricky part is that these sensations feel alarming, which triggers the exact same system that's causing them. It's a feedback loop. But it's also a loop you can interrupt.

Step one is simply understanding what's happening.

These aren't signs that something is wrong with your body or brain. They're signs of hyperarousal, your nervous system doing its job a little too enthusiastically. Just knowing that takes some of the fear away.

Step two is practicing a different response when they show up.

Instead of panicking, you acknowledge what's happening:

"This is hyperarousal. It's uncomfortable, but it's not dangerous. It will pass."

That message, I'm safe, there's no threat, is exactly what your nervous system needs to hear to start standing down.

These symptoms aren't permanent. They're just the volume your nervous system is set to right now. As your sleep anxiety decreases and your system recalibrates, the volume comes down on its own.

You're already in the process of turning it down. Every night you respond with a little less alarm is a night your nervous system learns it can relax.

If you're looking to recover from insomnia for good in as little as 8 weeks by fixing the root cause (hyper-arousal) 100% naturally (no pills, supplements, or CBT-i), then:

Schedule your FREE Sleep Evaluation Call

To peaceful sleep,

Ivo at End Insomnia

Why should you listen to me?

I recovered from insomnia after 5 brutal years of suffering. I've now coached 100s like you to end their insomnia for good, 100% naturally, by fixing the root cause - hyperarousal.

Tämä jakso on lisätty Podme-palveluun avoimen RSS-syötteen kautta eikä se ole Podmen omaa tuotantoa. Siksi jakso saattaa sisältää mainontaa.

Jaksot(142)

What "Accepting" Your Insomnia Actually Means (It's Not Giving Up)

What "Accepting" Your Insomnia Actually Means (It's Not Giving Up)

Acceptance is one of those words that gets misunderstood constantly, especially when it comes to insomnia.So let's clear it up, because understanding it correctly might be the difference between stayi...

27 Kesä 5min

Why Caring Less About Sleep is the Key to Sleeping Well

Why Caring Less About Sleep is the Key to Sleeping Well

Here's a secret that sounds almost too strange to be true: sleeping well consistently comes from caring less about sleeping well.I know how that lands when you're desperate for rest. Caring less feels...

20 Kesä 5min

What to Actually Do in the Hour Before Bed

What to Actually Do in the Hour Before Bed

The hour before bed can make or break your night. Not because of some magic routine that guarantees sleep, but because of how you approach it.Most people with insomnia spend that hour bracing for batt...

13 Kesä 5min

The One Habit That Sets Your Body's Sleep Clock

The One Habit That Sets Your Body's Sleep Clock

If you could only change one thing about your sleep schedule, this would be it: get out of bed at about the same time every single day.Not your bedtime. Your wake time. That's the anchor. And it's one...

6 Kesä 4min

Why Spending More Time in Bed Often Makes Insomnia Worse

Why Spending More Time in Bed Often Makes Insomnia Worse

It seems obvious. If you're not getting enough sleep, give yourself more chances to sleep. Go to bed earlier. Stay in bed later. Maximize the opportunity.It's one of the most natural responses to inso...

30 Touko 4min

You Don't Need 8 Hours of Sleep (And Insomnia Won't Kill You)

You Don't Need 8 Hours of Sleep (And Insomnia Won't Kill You)

There are two ideas about sleep that almost everyone with insomnia believes. Both feel like facts. Both fuel anxiety. And both deserve a serious reality check.Belief #1: You need 8 hours of sleepThis ...

23 Touko 5min

The Hardest Part of Recovering from Insomnia Isn't What You Think

The Hardest Part of Recovering from Insomnia Isn't What You Think

How Long Until You Recover From Insomnia?This is probably the question you want answered most. And I wish I could give you a clean number. But the honest answer is: it depends, and trying to pin it do...

16 Touko 5min

The 6-Second Practice That Calms Your Nervous System

The 6-Second Practice That Calms Your Nervous System

What if one of the most effective things you could do for your sleep takes about six seconds and involves saying a single sentence to yourself?It sounds too simple. But there's real science behind it....

9 Touko 5min

Suosittua kategoriassa Koulutus

rss-murhan-anatomia
psykopodiaa-podcast
adhd-podi
dear-ladies
rahapuhetta
rss-narsisti
voi-hyvin-meditaatiot-2
rss-valo-minussa-2
rss-niinku-asia-on
psykologia
rss-hereilla
rss-liian-kuuma-peruna
rss-duodecim-lehti
kesken
rss-monarch-talk-with-alexandra-alexis
rss-vapaudu-voimaasi
rss-arkea-ja-aurinkoa-podcast-espanjasta
rss-ihana-elamani
dreamtalk
rss-rahamania