I cannot sleep!
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Just saw this thread. Terrible. I Spent 6 months getting 4 or less hours of sleep a night. When you’re at that level of insomnia and someone says stuff like a warm bath or melatonin you want to flog them. I had tried everything. Most over the counter meds develop a tolerance too quickly. Weed had me awake and super stoned (yes, indica, yes cbn). Benzos are awesome! You also build a tolerance and they are as addictive af. I agree, stay away. Only thing that worked was a trazodone prescription. I would have preferred not to go scripts but by day 4 in a row of no sleep i wanted to run into traffic. Cognitive behavioral therapy is also recommended in conjunction. At the end of the day you need to deal with the things in your mind keeping you awake. Good luck. It was really one of the most painful experiences of my life.
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I've been an insomniac for most my life and the thing that realy helped me was advice I got from a college professor who was also an Insomniac.
Basicly you have to treat your bed like the pavlov dog and the bell. If you see your bed, you will think of sleep.
When you lay in bed and can't sleep after 15min, get back up and do something else. Watch some tv, do some chores anything that is calm and doesn't involve to much thought. after 1h you try again.
You will sleep eventualy but it can take a couple days - weeks to get it right. For the most part now, I fall asleep pretty easy but I still wake up every night usualy I can fall asleep almost right away. If I'm out of luck, I still have to get up and repeat 2-4 times.
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I haven't taken any sleeping pills for over 3 weeks now. But I have been working at least 80 hours a week. At night I am so tired I can barely keep my eyes open.
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Just remembered this bit I read about our adrenal glands and how stress/diet/etc affects them…
There was one thing that said ideally you should eat less carbs, more protein in the morning and have something more carb-focused in the evening, as it can make for better sleep. Might be worth a look!
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If you have time, please try to listen to Andrew Huberman PhD’s podcast. He is a professor of neurobiology and opthamology at Stanford. Good communicator. He spent a month on sleep (episodes 2-5 I believe). Very worthwhile. Lots of easily actionable steps. Good science. Helped me a ton.
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