2343: No Sleep

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I like sleeping. It is pleasant. Sometimes I like it a bit too much and do it for too long.

I also find sleeping one of the most frustrating things in the world, particularly as it's something you have to do.

Why do I find something so pleasant and relaxing so frustrating, though? Well, it's because I don't really know how to do it.

I'm serious! To be honest, I doubt anyone really knows how they fall asleep; it's a biological function so it just sort of happens. And yet, paradoxically, it's the awareness that I don't know how to make myself actually fall asleep that often keeps me awake at night.

The main trouble I have is anxiety-related. When I'm in a situation where there are no other sources of stimulation (sound, light, pictures, conversation) my brain doesn't think "ooh, nice, a bit of quiet, let's shut down for a bit rather than processing all this multi-sensory information". No; instead, my brain — and indeed, I imagine, the brain of anyone who suffers with anxiety — decides that yes, now would be a really good time to think about each and every one of the things that have upset you, made you sad, made you angry, frustrated you or that are worrying you.

Sometimes these thoughts come one at a time, one leading into another through a twisted chain of logic that doesn't make any sort of rational sense — but then anxiety is irrational for the most part, anyway.

Sometimes they come all at once and collapse in a big heap, worries and anxieties from disparate sources all intermingling into one horrible mess that quickens the breathing, sets the pulse to racing and makes the body feel for all intents and purposes that now might be a good time to run away.

From what, though? Sadly, you can't outrun your own brain, so quite where the physiological reaction comes from I can't be sure, but it's certainly unpleasant. More to the point, this then feeds into the growing anxiety I have that I want to get to sleep and shut all these unwelcome thoughts out, but I can't. And then the cycle begins anew until I either finally fall asleep out of sheer exhaustion or decide to get up and do something until I can't keep my eyes open any longer, as happened last night, when for reasons beyond my ken I was unable to get even close to sleep before 6am, which is not particularly conducive to a productive and/or healthy lifestyle.

I have certain thoughts that I always come back to when I'm feeling anxious, and I can't avoid them. These tend to be experiences that I found traumatic or unpleasant. Objectively speaking, they weren't necessarily actually traumatic in the sense of, say, injury or bereavement, but they're experiences that I had to go through that I didn't want to go through.

By far the most common is a twisted memory of the day I got forced out of my (admittedly horrible and shit, albeit quite well-paid) job at energy company SSE last February. I had endured a considerable period of workplace bullying from my immediate team leader and overall line manager, and they eventually managed to shove me out of the door after a complete mockery of a meeting in which I was invited to plead my case futilely while no-one paid any attention whatsoever. The meeting concluded with me shouting "Fuck you!" in the face of the line manager who had given me the most grief, followed by me storming out, more angry than I think I've ever been in my life.

The memory is twisted, though; when I flash back to it in the depths of anxiety-induced insomnia, that's not what happens. I don't stop with releasing the tension by shouting. Sometimes I throw the phone on the table at someone. Sometimes I fling my chair across the room. Sometimes I pick up the table and throw it at the people sitting across from me with stern yet smug expressions on their faces. Sometimes I slam the door so hard when I leave the cramped meeting room that it falls off its hinges. And sometimes I deliberately vandalise the rest of the offices on the way out in an attempt to somehow release the rage that has been boiling inside me; to give it physical form; to get it out of me.

I can't quite tell if these thoughts are things I wish I'd done on that horrible day or things that I worry I might have done if I'd taken the safeties off a bit more. I suppose it doesn't really matter either way; you can't go back and do things differently, however much you might like to, so the brain takes solace in fantasy. In its own way, the traumatic images are cathartic, but at the same time they induce such a state of heightened tension and anxiety in my whole body that, if I allow my thought process to get into that meeting room at all, I know that I'm not going to be able to calm down for a good few hours unless I have something — anything — to quickly and immediately distract me from it. In other words, if I allow my anxious thoughts to run away with me and end up, as they inevitably do if I leave them unchecked, in that horrible situation, I know I'm not going to be getting any sleep.

Because even if I successfully banish the most unpleasant of the thoughts, my brain is still keenly aware that I don't know how to shut it down properly. Oh for an "off" switch.


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0 thoughts on “2343: No Sleep

  1. Have you tried hashing a period of time before you go to bed where you avoid brightly lit screens? I only ask because there's been a lot of reports about people sleeping much worse since we all have mobiles. The brightly lit screens inhibit sleepy responses apparently. When I've struggled to sleep it has always helped to have an hour before bed with no computer. Reading a book in bed in a fairly dimly lit bedroom always helps me to nod off. The book helps focus away from unhelpful thoughts while being a quiet, calm thing to help the brain shut down.

  2. I couldn't agree more Pete – 'Oh for an OFF switch!" And the stupidity of it is that often the things that decide that they just have to play through your mind are often things from a long time ago that you've successfully dealt with, categorised, filed, locked the filing cabinet and installed the guard-crocodile in the basement of your mind. How did they get out again?? And why? Often they don't even bother you any more, yet there they are having a little replay session all of their own in the middle of the bloody night.
    You know, the twisted memory paragraph made me instantly think of how well it could fit into one of your stories. Give the characters all names. Describe them in great detail so we can see their stereotypes and their particular expressions. Then describe your protagonist, giving him a growing sense of control as the 'meeting' progresses, followed by the biggest explosion you can create. Then rewrite it like a 'Ground Hogs Day' series, but each day give him a little more control and them a little less confidence and arrogance. See how many times you have to write the scene before they are on a par. Then shift it in your protagonist's direction. See how you feel as you do this, then see if the stupid 'night-time scenarios continue and/or change. And let me know. 😀

  3. My wife struggles with insomnia linked to her anxiety, and pretty much everything you're describing to here sounds exactly like things that she has told me before. For the first 5 years or so of our marriage, she'd come to bed about an hour or so before I was ready to get up to go to work. It was awful.
    She finally sleeps semi-regularly now, with the occasional "bad night" in there . . . but the good ones outweigh the bad these days. What finally set her straight was two things: 1) regular rigorous exercise, 2) routine. We workout, hard, nearly every day, and go to bed at the same time every night. It took months but it finally tricked her biological clock into functioning again.

    I definitely agree with Fring too. No-screen time is VERY important. We don't realize how zap-fried out brains are living off screens from day to day. There is no TV in our bedroom, and my cell phone is always strategically placed out of reach of the bed.

    Of course, I don't presume to prescribe these things to you as solutions – I know that everyone is different, but it's just some examples of things that have worked in my house.

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