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getting to sleep
you sound so frustrated...
I would start with a problem solver mindset...
What keeps you awake? (is it your racing mind? do you drift off and then wake up suddenly at the smallest noise? are you worried about something happening?)
What are you doing before bedtime?
(I find that doing yoga, having warm tea helps. Also if your mind is worried about something happening, writing it all out helps... it may sound silly, but the physical ACT of writing it out helps feel as if it's been taken out of your brain and expressed. you don't have to read it again...)
how do you FEEL at bedtime? (tense? wired?)
I was like you when i was younger too. Couldn't sleep "wasn't sleepy", so I'd read under the covers until 1am or 2am and then fall asleep. I'd get caught reading in bed all the time.
If I don't try to go to bed my "natural" sleep time seems to be around 3am.
I find that if I'm on the computer it's easy for me to stay awake all night.
Reading makes me sleepy sometimes.
Let me know what happens at bedtime, and I might be able to help you out...
From what you've written, it sounds like your mind is going a mile a minute at night... which gets you all worked up.
Something that really helped slow down my brain is self-hypnosis. I downloaded an MP3 and listened to it on headphones, followed the instructions.
If you find you can't follow the instructions because your brain is thinking of other things, try writing out all that you're worried about in a dollar-store journal beside your bed, and then try the self-hypnosis.
I've also read that taking a shower before bed helps - that the gradual lowering of the body temperature helps the release of the neurochemicals that make us sleepy.
FOr me, if I wash my face or brush my teeth, I tend to wake up, so I have to follow up with some breathing exercises.
If it gets really bad, I take melatonin.
But, back to you...
-I have to point out though, that even if you've tried a zillion things, if you don't do them in the right order sometimes, or the right combo then it might not help. If you get it right, then it might. It's a tricky thing, for sure. The way to figure it out is to take note of how you feel/think after you try it, and keep a record of it. After a time you'll notice patterns and then you'll have a lead to how to try.
Thinking of nice things, and making a pleasant bedtime routine helps to get you settled down as well.
Some questions:
What;s your bedtime routine?
Are you eating anything before bed? (if so, what? how many mins before you start getting ready for bed?)
What are things that help get your mind relaxed? Your body relaxed?
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