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{"id":2327,"date":"2018-01-14T20:47:52","date_gmt":"2018-01-14T20:47:52","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/emmacameron.com\/?p=2327"},"modified":"2022-05-15T19:45:05","modified_gmt":"2022-05-15T19:45:05","slug":"stop-lying-awake-worrying","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/emmacameron.com\/anxiety\/stop-lying-awake-worrying\/","title":{"rendered":"How to Stop Lying Awake Worrying – 29 Ideas to Try"},"content":{"rendered":"

\u00a0\"Sleep<\/a><\/h1>\n

Do you often find yourself lying awake worrying in the middle of the night?<\/h1>\n

There’s a wonderful poem, ‘Things’ by Fleur Adcock*<\/a>\u00a0which brilliantly captures something of what it’s like in the night when you can’t stop lying awake worrying.<\/p>\n

‘There are worse things than…’<\/em> Adcock says, going on to list a few of the things preoccupying her mind as she lies awake worrying. She’s trying to reassure herself and put her worries in perspective.<\/p>\n

And then, thud<\/em>:<\/p>\n

‘It is 5a.m. All the worse things come stalking in<\/h3>\n

And stand icily about the bed looking worse and worse’.<\/h3>\n

Does that feel familiar?<\/p>\n

\"How<\/a>
Illustration \u00a9Emma Cameron 2018 based on etching ‘The Sleep of Reason Produces Monsters’ by Francisco Goya.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

There’s something about that middle-of-the-night time that seems to magnify worries…<\/h2>\n

What seems manageable enough (or even possible to ignore ) in the daytime becomes this massive fear-inducing monolith, in the small hours of night.<\/p>\n

In Old English there’s even a word for\u00a0the worries that gather as you lie sleepless before dawn: “\u00faht-cearu” (literally, “early-morning care”).<\/p>\n

When you’re lying awake worrying in the night, you urgently want two things:<\/h2>\n

You want to calm down and not feel so anxious<\/h2>\n

and<\/strong><\/h2>\n

You wanna get back to sleeeep!<\/em><\/h2>\n

<\/h3>\n

So how can you help yourself to stop lying awake worrying? Let’s look at three areas:<\/h3>\n

(a) Advance preparation<\/p>\n

(b) Things that can help when you’re actually there in bed,\u00a0lying awake worrying<\/p>\n

(c) What you can do if you decide to get out of bed for a bit<\/p>\n

Now, I’ll break it down a bit further, and give you 28 actionable tips.<\/h3>\n28 ways you can stop lying awake worrying. #insomnia #anxiety #sleeptips <\/a><\/span>Share on X<\/a><\/span>\n

Advance Preparation<\/h1>\n

Sleep experts all seem to agree on the same basic guidelines to help people who want to improve their sleep and minimise insomnia (you can read the 12 main tips in my previous post<\/a>). So start by making sure you’re following those.<\/p>\n

What if you’ve been following that advice, but you still<\/em> can’t stop lying awake worrying?<\/p>\n

Things to Do When You Are\u00a0in Bed\u00a0Lying Awake Worrying<\/h1>\n

Although the general advice for people that wake at night is to get up<\/strong> (see tips 19-28 below), that doesn’t suit everyone’s situation.\u00a0And anyhow, sooner or later you will have to go back to bed and hope to fall asleep again.\u00a0Here are some ideas that may help when you are in bed with insomnia, and you desperately want to stop lying awake worrying:<\/p>\n

1. Write Down Your Worries<\/h3>\n

Keep a notepad and pencil by the bed. Jot the worries down and promise yourself you’ll attend to them at a stated time tomorrow (this only works if you do stick to your promise, though!)<\/p>\n

Or<\/em> (thinking ahead), at a time of day that’s not too close to bedtime, make a list of your\u00a0main worries. You’re not trying to solve them; just park them for now.\u00a0Then set a time for the next morning when you will review your list, think about it some more, and figure out some practical steps to take.\u00a0Before bed, tell yourself something like, ‘I don’t have to think about this until 9am tomorrow’ (or whatever time you’ve set). Give your internal worry-machine permission to be off duty overnight.\u00a0A related idea is to spend 5 minutes before bed writing a to-do list for the next day. One study<\/a> showed that this helped with sleeping.<\/p>\n

2. The ‘Park Bench’ Technique<\/h3>\n

Accepting that you are worried, anxious, fearful or whatever, can be helpful. You may wish the feeling wasn’t there, but it is. The Park Bench technique is designed to help you accept the difficult feeling, and be with it<\/em> without being consumed by it.\u00a0Visualise your fear\/ anxiety\/ worry as an object, shape, creature or character. Picture it. It doesn’t matter whether you envisage it as a blob, a monster, a big grey cube, or whatever.\u00a0Now picture yourself sitting on a bench in a lovely, well-tended park. Picture your fear (in whatever shape, size or form you’ve imagined it) sitting nearby. Imagine what you can see if you look around. Is there a lake sparkling in the sun? Leafy trees? Flowers blooming? Children playing? A kindly, wise old person sitting nearby? Someone feeding the ducks? Can you hear birds? Smell the fresh grass? Make the visualisation as vivid as possible. Turn your attention back to the fear every now and then, as it sits there, and just allow it to be there, just as it is. Be aware of the sky above, the earth below, and the big, big, space beyond.\u00a0Continue the visualisation as long as you like.\u00a0The idea is that you are accepting that the anxiety is there, but you are also connecting with an awareness of something expansive and greater, a space that’s easily big enough to contain the anxiety.<\/p>\n

3. Breathing and Subvocalising<\/h3>\n

Breathing slowly and deeply can be incredibly helpful for releasing insomnia, as it shifts your body into a calmer state.\u00a0Some experts advise a 4-7-8 cycle (in through the nose for a count of four, hold for seven, and out through the mouth for eight). Others advocate a fairly continuous slow in-and-out cycle, with the out-breath a little longer than the in-breath. I don’t know which is best; you could try both and see which feels most calming.\u00a0It can also help if you subvocalise (say in your head, silently) “saaaaaa” during the in-breath and “ohmmmm” during the out-breath. Long vowel sounds are calming to the nervous system, even if they’re just ‘heard’ inside your brain.<\/p>\n

4. Listen to a Podcast or Audiobook<\/h3>\n

If you have a smartphone, you can download podcasts and audiobooks, ready to play at very low volume if you’re lying awake worrying. You can set the ‘sleep timer’ on the app, so that it doesn’t play on for the rest of the night. Podcasts are free, and if you don’t like one you aren’t stuck with it but can move on to another.\u00a0Because you want to feel more peaceful and to fall asleep, you’re aiming for something that is calming, mildly absorbing but which you\u00a0don’t find\u00a0too dramatic, disturbing or stimulating. Here are some podcast and audiobook ideas to start you off:<\/p>\n