8
Sleep Tips for Worriers
Relax.
Be happy. Get some sleep and leave the worrying for tomorrow.
Here are some clever ways to stop anxiety and embrace restorative
sleep.
1.
Put worry on a schedule. "In today's busy world, we don't
have time to do normal worrying until the lights go out,"
says Mary Susan Esther, M.D., director of the Sleep Center at
South Park in Charlotte, North Carolina, and president of the
American Academy of Sleep Medicine. "Yet everyone needs
a worry time," she adds. The trick is to schedule it on
a regular basis, early in the evening -- any time before 8:00
P.M. Sit down with a stack of 3 x 5 index cards and ask yourself,
"What am I worried about?" Then write down one worry
on each card. When you seem to have written down your last worry,
go back to the first card, reflect on the worry it describes,
and give yourself a reality check. Does the worry involve a
problem that you can do something about? If not, rip up the
card. If there is something you can do, write down possible
actions and tuck the card into a worry box. You can give it
more thought in the morning and decide what to do.
2. Head for the bathroom. Once
you've shut down the computer and had your scheduled worry session,
a warm bath before bed will not only relax you, it will also
adjust your body's temperature to a point that signals your
brain: "Hey, honey, it's time for sleep."
3. Hide the clocks. "Digital
clocks blare time at you," says Dr. Esther. "It's
normal to wake throughout the night, but if you look at a clock
and see the time, it's likely to increase your anxiousness about
not being asleep." If you need a clock to wake you in the
morning, just turn its face to the wall right before bed. You'll
hear it just as well.
4. Keep milk and cookies within
reach. Milk contains sleep-inducing tryptophan, but you need
carbs to get it into your brain. Dr. Esther likes cookies (low-fat,
of course) as the carb, but you could substitute crackers if
you'd prefer. There are tryptophan supplements on the market,
but neither she nor the FDA recommends them; their safety is
still in question.
5. Nix nightcaps. "Sometimes
sleepless individuals will have a drink or two to help fall
asleep," says Dr. Esther. "While it will shorten time
falling asleep, alcohol actually causes more arousal as your
body metabolizes it. The result is it shortens sleep. ins8i"A
glass of wine with dinner is okay," she adds. "But
a glass afterward may have an impact on your sleep."
6. Treat yourself like a child.
Create a nurturing postbath, prebed routine that's intended
to help you wind down, says Dr. Esther. A little reading, a
little soft music -- whatever makes you feel nurtured and relaxed.
"We tend to take care of everyone else before we take care
of ourselves," says Dr. Esther. "That has to change."
7. Stop those thoughts. Once you
hit the sheets, worry time is over -- especially about sleeping.
There's a therapy trick called "thought-stopping"
that works like a charm, says Dr. Esther. "If you find
yourself thinking about tomorrow and saying, 'It's going to
be a bad day because I'm never going to sleep,' immediately
think: 'STOP. Don't go there. I know I've done this before.
If I don't fall asleep, I'll get out of bed, flip through a
magazine, but I am NOT going to focus on this stuff!'"
Sounds simple, but once you try it, you'll find it works!
8. Schedule your sleep time. "Stick
with it seven days a week," says Dr. Esther. Opening your
eyes at the same time every morning triggers a series of biochemicals
that, as the day winds down, tell your body when it's time to
sleep.
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