“I won’t be able to get through tomorrow if I don’t sleep tonight.”
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Managing anxious thoughts deserves special attention.
Anxious thoughts are one of the main drivers of insomnia.
It is common for anxious thoughts to ramp up as night approaches.
It is also common for them to surge again in the middle of the night.
For many people, one single thought can trigger a full-body alarm response.
And suddenly you are not just awake.
You are fighting.
You may feel like you are walking on eggshells in your own mind.
Because one wrong thought feels like it will set off an avalanche.
This is where a considerable amount of insomnia suffering comes from.
Not just the tiredness.
Not just the wakefulness.
But the way your mind interprets it.
And reacts to it.
Your relationship with your thoughts determines how much Dirty Pain (the emotional pain that we unwillingly amplify and feel during insomnia) you experience.
There are two main ways to work with anxious thoughts.
Both require mindfulness.
Because you have to notice what you are thinking to respond differently.
Enter Thought Challenging.
Thought challenging means you do three simple things.
You notice the thought.
You recognize that it might not be accurate.
You test it rather than automatically believing it.
This is especially useful when your mind is catastrophizing.
Because catastrophizing feels real.
Even when it is not.
Here is a classic insomnia thought.
“I won’t be able to get through tomorrow if I don’t sleep tonight.
A helpful challenge is not fake positivity.
It is a realistic perspective.
You can remind yourself of the times you slept badly and still got through the day.
You can remind yourself of the times tomorrow was not as bad as you predicted.
Here is another classic thought spiral.
“If I don’t sleep tonight, I won’t sleep tomorrow either.”
“Then it will keep getting worse.”
“Eventually, I will never sleep again.”
“And then I will fall apart.”
This thought feels intense.
But it is not grounded in reality.
When you challenge thoughts like this, you bring in what you already know.
Your body has a sleep drive.
It builds with wakefulness.
And it will force sleep to happen before you can go too long without it.
You also remind yourself that insomnia is miserable.
But it is not a death sentence.
And it is not proof that you are broken.
Thought challenging is how you interrupt the mental snowball before it becomes panic.
A simple thought-challenging process
You can do this quickly.
You do not need to journal for an hour.
You need to slow the spiral down enough to see clearly.
Start here:
What is happening right now.
Then ask this.
What story am I telling about what is happening right now.
Name the emotion.
Fear.
Frustration.
Dread.
Hopelessness.
Give it a number from 1 to 10.
This matters because it helps you notice shifts.
Now challenge the thought.
What are other explanations besides the worst one?
What would I say to a friend in this exact situation?
Is this thought entirely accurate based on what I know about sleep and insomnia?
How likely is the worst-case scenario, really?
If tomorrow is hard, what will I do to cope?
Then check again.
Do I feel any different?
Did the number shift at all?
Even a small shift matters.
Because it lowers the Sleep-Stopping Force.
The limitations of Thought-Challenging
Thought challenging is helpful.
But it is not the whole solution.
There are two reasons it often falls short.
First, thought challenging does not automatically undo...