Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Waking Up Too Early! By Melanie Haiken

Great article…I have used every one of these techniques..they do work! Sleeping is essential to good health...hope this helps you on your healing path!

By Melanie Haiken, Caring.com senior editor

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Does the question “How’d you sleep?” make you want to scream? Those of us plagued by middle-of-the-night waking often feel like punching people who don’t know what it’s like to stare at the ceiling in the wee hours. Here are the five most common types of middle-of-the-night sleep problems, and what to do about them.
Problem #1: You’re awake for no reason, with your mind spinning.
Middle-of-the-night worrying is probably the number-one type of sleeplessness faced by people of all ages. And boy, is it frustrating. You know you need to relax and get back to sleep, but anxious thoughts and to-do list items keep popping into your head.
What to do
1. Preserve the darkness. Keep the room dark when you wake up. Keep a small book light or mini flashlight next to your bed and use it to navigate your way to the bathroom, or put a dim night-light in the bathroom and leave the door cracked, so you can find your way there. Whatever you do, don’t turn on the overhead light in the bathroom once you’re inside.
2. Move the clock out of reach. Constantly checking the clock and calculating how long you’ve been awake only feeds your anxiety: “Oh no, now I’m only going to get five hours of sleep.” Set the alarm, then move the clock where you can’t see or check it.
3. Write it down, then let it go. On your bedside table, keep a notebook and pen devoted solely to nighttime “worry lists.” Using a dim night-light, write down each thought that’s bothering you. Then, after you write it down, make a conscious effort to cross it off the list in your mind. In the morning, transfer the action items to your to-do list. Over time, you’ll develop faith in yourself that writing down your worries equates with getting them done.
4. Breathe and ease. In his book The Worry Solution, anxiety specialist Martin Rossman recommends a three-step approach to sleeplessness that really works. First, do “belly breathing,” which means breathing deeply enough that your diaphragm rises and falls. Next, isolate each part of your body, from your feet up to your neck, by tensing and relaxing it. Finally, imagine yourself in a favorite place, such as lying in the sun on the beach. Use all of your senses; imagine that you’re hearing the waves and smelling the salt air. If it doesn’t work the first time, do all three steps again in the same order.