What to Do When Your Body Won’t Sleep and Your Mind Won’t Stop

What to Do When Your Body Won’t Sleep and Your Mind Won’t Stop

When you are awake at night, and you do not want to be, your instinct is usually to fight it.

You try to sleep harder.

You try to relax.

You try to calm your thoughts.

You try to make the night go differently than it is.

And the more you try, the more alert your body becomes.

That is not because you are doing something wrong.

It is because your nervous system interprets effort as urgency.

Urgency tells the brain there is a threat.

And when your brain senses a threat, sleep is blocked.

So let’s change the goal.

Instead of trying to sleep, the new goal is to find peace while awake.

Not forced peace.

Not fake calm.

Just less resistance to the moment you are in.

This is where mindfulness in bed comes in.

Mindfulness does not mean clearing your mind.

It does not mean feeling relaxed.

And it does not mean making sleep happen.

Mindfulness simply means paying attention to something neutral in the present moment.

When insomnia shows up, your attention usually collapses inward.

  1. You monitor your thoughts.
  2. You monitor your body.
  3. You monitor the night.
  4. You monitor the future.

That constant monitoring keeps the nervous system activated.

Mindfulness gives your attention somewhere else to rest.

Not to escape the night.

But to stop feeding anxiety.

One simple way to practice mindfulness in bed is a body scan.

You gently move your attention through your body.

You notice sensations without trying to change them.

You are not trying to relax your body.

You are just noticing what is already there.

You might start with your toes.

Then your feet.

Then your lower legs.

Then your thighs.

Then your pelvis.

Then your torso.

Then your arms.

Then your neck.

Then your face.

Then the top of your head.

You can move slowly.

You can move quickly.

There is no right pace.

If you cannot feel much in a certain area, that is fine.

You just noticed that, too.

If your mind wanders, that's okay.

That is the practice.

Each time you notice your mind drifting and gently bring it back, you are training your nervous system to be less reactive.

This practice does not guarantee sleep.

And that is important.

Mindfulness is not a sleep technique.

It is a tool for nervous system retraining.

When you practice being awake without panicking, your body learns that night is not dangerous.

And when night no longer feels dangerous, sleep becomes possible again.

Even if sleep does not come right away, something else happens.

You suffer less.

You conserve energy.

You stop adding extra distress on top of fatigue.

That matters.

Many people assume that if they are awake, they might as well be miserable.

But resting while awake is very different from struggling while awake.

Normal sleepers rest in bed all the time, even when they're not sleeping.

They daydream.

They drift.

They let their minds wander.

They do not treat wakefulness as a crisis.

Mindfulness helps you relearn that skill.

At first, mindfulness in bed may feel uncomfortable.

Your anxiety around sleeping may still be present.

That does not mean it is failing.

It means your nervous system is learning something new.

Over time, your body begins to associate nighttime with less struggle.

And when struggle fades, sleep follows naturally.

Not because you forced it.

But because you stopped getting in the way.

If you're looking to recover from insomnia for good in as little as 8 weeks, schedule a Complimentary Sleep Consult to see if we can help.

To peaceful sleep,

Ivo at End Insomnia

Why should you listen to me?

I recovered from insomnia after 5 brutal years of suffering. I also wrote a book about it. I've now coached many on how to end their insomnia for good in 8 weeks.

Looking get started with the End Insomnia System? Start with the End Insomnia book on Amazon.

Denne episoden er hentet fra en åpen RSS-feed og er ikke publisert av Podme. Den kan derfor inneholde annonser.

Episoder(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 Jun 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 Jun 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 Jun 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 Jun 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 Mai 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 Mai 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 Mai 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 Mai 5min

Populært innen Fakta

fastlegen
dine-penger-pengeradet
relasjonspodden-med-dora-thorhallsdottir-kjersti-idem
foreldreradet
treningspodden
jakt-og-fiskepodden
rss-kunsten-a-leve
rss-kull
rss-sarbar-med-lotte-erik
mikkels-paskenotter
sinnsyn
rss-strid-de-norske-borgerkrigene
smart-forklart
hverdagspsyken
gravid-uke-for-uke
rss-bisarr-historie
tomprat-med-gunnar-tjomlid
teknologi-og-mennesker
level-up-med-anniken-binz
takk-og-lov-med-anine-kierulf