by TRACEY McCLURG
You have to try so hard these days to be truly calm and relaxed.
Signs stare out in markets and shop windows reminding us to “Keep Calm and Carry On”, to “Always Make Time for Laughter”, even to “Just Breathe”.
And they’re right — but when did it become so darn hard to do that?
Six months ago I went through insomnia boot camp. The synapse in my brain responsible for sending me to sleep suddenly went on vacation, leaving no note about when it would be back.
It wound up having a good, long holiday, as all I could grasp was maybe one or two hours each “night” for close to four months.
Four months of living hell.
For most people, the odd bad night’s sleep is normal, forgotten about quickly, like a slow traffic light. But superglue a few sleepless nights together and you begin to notice the effects. It’s debilitating: work feels harder, noises louder, people more irritating, and the urge to leap onto the nearest train track disturbingly appealing.
A few restless nights became three or four sleepless weeks which rolled into months. It was at this stage that my body began to feel detached from my mind, an awkward, perpetually exhausted, lumbering nuisance. You begin to consider seeking help outside your own mind. Within the first few days of my insomnia ordeal, I turned to Google for answers.
Typing symptoms into an internet search engine leads irresistibly to the conclusion that one has contracted a terminal illness and ought to start bidding their loved ones farewell. But there’s a wealth of information out there and different methods for someone willing to try them — and god knows by this stage I was desperate.
Top Comments
Amazing descriptive explanation of insomnia created by anxitey! I have suffered from depression and anxiety for most of my adult life and as a result have suffered from both hypersomnia and insomnia. Unfortunately I have turned to the quick fixes such as Valium to sleep and Coffee to wake. I have to agree that starting to over think your daily routine and fearing going to bed are not the right way and just listening to your body and doing what it tells you to do at the time is usually best. What a great article - had me laughing and crying!
Glad I'm not alone guys. I've got uni exams this week and while I am super prepared, going to bed at 9pm at the latest, I'm still laying there at 3am. It's excruciating! Can't wait for this week to be over.