it takes me at least an hour or two to fall asleep, even when I'm tired. what do?
it takes me at least an hour or two to fall asleep, even when I'm tired. what do?
things that seem to help my sleep are
physical activity during the day
In the morning, if you have a choice, for optimal night-tiredage
I used to type these kinds of questions into google, but it's becoming completely unusable due to all the LLM content farming. At leasat I know most of you are real
A few things help me
I used to have a lot of trouble sleeping but since I've done some of the above i can generally fall asleep consistently at 11pm
When I started program lifting about a decade ago, one benefit I never really was told about that definitely happened is I fell asleep so much easier. Even though I usually lift mid day, days where I lift or get in some cardio I fall asleep and stay asleep so much better. It can be worth getting in some more physical activity for a lot of reasons, but sleep is one of them too.
that's something I noticed too. I stopped exercising a few months ago and I feel like my sleep has gotten worse. Really gotta get back to it
Don't get in bed until you're committed to going to sleep.
Don't fuck around on the internet in bed.
Read a book if that helps you fall asleep. I know some people will just end up reading for hours but it occupies my ADHD brain enough that I can relax.
I also take magnesium glycinate which has a noticeable effect on sleep quality.
Opening the window for fresh air is probably the best thing for me. Sometimes I can't fall asleep at all until I open the window.
Putting on some audiobook/podcast that isn't too funny/interesting helps with not thought/worry spiraling. The easiest is to listen to something I already read before.
cool/fresh air really helps me too actually
I think its mostly temperature, since its too cold to have my windows open in the winter and I don't have much trouble then
One of the things that triggers sleep is falling body temperature. Not specifically "being cold," it's the decrease that does it, which is why a hot shower to push your core temp up makes you sleepy afterward as you cool down.
To add on the comment here, a minimum dosage is fine, even preferable. 0.5mg works.
Pharmacies are going to carry 5, 10 mg so try buying it online.
https://www.reddit.com/r/sleep/comments/p12czj/turns_out_the_best_dosage_for_melatonin_is_03mg/
Above is a random link I found online regarding it. The ideal dosage is going to vary from individual to individual. Good news is that there is practically no side effect for taking a higher dosage.
The mechanism, if I remember correctly, is that melatonin naturally releases from the body when you're falling asleep so you're tricking the body into thinking that it's falling asleep already. In my personal case, you feel a bit more drowsy than usual 20-30 minutes after taking it. You should time it to fall asleep then because the drowsiness goes away rather quickly if you fight it. I buy a 1mg tablet and bite into it to last 2-3 days but feel free to experiment.
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My sister developed a tolerance to melatonin but she was taking it every day. Now eats a couple CBD gummies before bed.
Screen time has a big effect, if you cut yourself off from screens at least an hour before bed you'll probably notice a big improvement!
in addition to just getting off earlier, you can also try to filter some of the blue light / glare from your screens towards the evening. The most popular sunset simulation redshift thingy is probably flux and I recommend giving it a shot. Might help you get tired more easily
It's not a magic bullet or anything, but I find it relaxing for my eyes at least and it might help your sleep too
interesting. Windows has that night light mode thingy that I always turn off. I wonder if it could actually help with sleep...
edit: I just turned on night light mode on my work PC and now I feel kinda sleepy
You can also turn Windows, Mac, and Android devices black-and-white (maybe true for iphones too but idk). This eliminates all color input and, in my opinion, is easier on your eyes and makes redshifted stuff look less weird. It's also less visually appealing, so you want to look at it less. I do this all the time and when I do color-sensitive stuff it's crazy to me how oversaturated digital colors are, and how much digital developers use bright colors to grab and hold your attention.
I think for Windows it's WIN + SHIFT + C to go grayscale, and on Android it's "Bedtime mode" which you can schedule or add as a toggle to your pulldown bar thing
Have you ever talked to a doctor about it? One to two hours is quite extreme, and would probably be classified as a sleep disorder.
I've had problems getting to sleep most of my life, but it generally took me around 30 minutes most nights. I eventually developed really bad insomnia in my mid-30s and got diagnosed with sleep apnea a few years ago. My poor sleep was possibly causing spikes of cortisol during the day that made it difficult for me to get to sleep.
I just try to think creatively then I'm out like a candle in a hurricane, I only make up like 3 things before I drift off. On the flipside of that, if I think about something real, then I can stay up for half the night letting my mind race in circles.
Same for me. Reading a book and creating images in my head = work, makes me sleepy. Passively consuming = staying up way too late because I just keep filling my head with useless shit.
It really depends on you. It could be one of these two:
I find the sound of the warp core really soothing, and helps me get to sleep.
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I take a walk with my dog ~2 hours before bed, helps me wind down. Also helps to stick to some kind of routine, like drinking a nice beverage, and reading for a short amount of time.
Lots of good tips here, but one simple thing helped me. When you are trying to sleep imagine you just woke up early in the morning but long before you have to be up. Like pretending it's 4 in the morning, idk why but putting my mind in that place helps me.