Your Scary 3 a.m. Thoughts Are Usually Wrong
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There is a kind of thinking that keeps insomnia going. If you have been awake at 3 a.m., you know it well.
One thought shows up.
"If I don't sleep soon, tomorrow will be ruined."
Then another one.
"What if I never sleep right again?"
Then another. Soon a small worry has grown into full panic.
A lot of people with insomnia say it feels like walking on eggshells inside their own head. They try hard not to set off the next wave of worry.
That makes sense. Those kinds of thoughts are one of the biggest reasons people can't sleep. They get loud right before bed. Then they get loud again in the middle of the night.
But how you deal with the thoughts is something you can change.
Challenge your thoughts
This one is simple. When a scary thought shows up, stop and ask yourself one question. Is this really true? Or is my brain making up the worst thing it can think of?
Here is how it works.
Say you are in bed thinking:
"I won't be able to work tomorrow if I don't sleep right now."
Instead of believing it, check it. Think back on the rough nights you have had. You still got through those days, right?
Even better, think about the times you were sure the day would be awful. And then it turned out fine (or maybe even great).
Or maybe your brain goes bigger.
"If I don't sleep tonight, I won't sleep tomorrow. Then it gets worse and worse until I fall apart."
That thought feels true in the dark. But it is not how sleep works.
Your body has a built-in system called sleep drive. The longer you stay awake, the more it builds up.
So a few rough nights actually make the push to sleep stronger. Your body has a backup plan, even when your brain says it doesn't.
You don't need anything fancy to do this. Just catch the thought and ask: is this really true? What do I actually know?
Where this tool runs out
Checking your thoughts helps. But it has limits. You should know them so you don't get frustrated.
First, it can take the edge off. But it is not strong enough on its own to calm a body that has been on high alert for months or years.
Real relief comes from slowly teaching your body that it is safe. That takes time. And it takes more than one tool.
Second, sometimes you can't argue your way out of worry. Because the worry is not always wrong.
If you check the thought "tomorrow might be hard," the honest answer might be... yeah, it might be.
You have made it through before. That is worth remembering. But pretending it will be easy is not the same as being honest.
Here is the trap to watch for.
If you start using this tool in a desperate way, trying to argue your fear away so you can finally sleep, it turns into a fight.
And you can't win that fight by trying harder.
There is another way
So think of this as one tool. It works great for thoughts that are way off base.
But what about the worry that remains after you challenge it?
There is another way to handle that. One that does not ask you to change your thoughts at all. It changes how you hold them.
Instead of arguing with a thought, you step back and watch it.
You stop treating every scary thought like an order you have to follow. You start seeing it as one more thing your brain is doing.
That change, from being inside your thoughts to watching them, changes everything.
If you want to end insomnia for good and want me to keep you personally accountable until you do, start your 7-day FREE trial of the End Insomnia Program here👇
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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.