Insomnia

Rugne

New member
Well, yet again I have insomnia, sitting here watching the clock tick as painting is still out of the question, and I don't feel like reading at the moment, so anyone got any good cures for insomnia?
I'm rapidly getting to a point where I'm prepared to try almost anything.

Looking forward to any ideas.

Marc
 

ScottRadom

Shogun of Saskatchewan
Start a Fight Club?

Seriously, why fight it? Get caught up on some old DvD's. If you haven't made time for battlestar Galactica you can pound through a season every couple of days. What an opportunity! Space Marines don't sleep. When Bane released all the crazy's out of Arkham Batman went like 4 weeks without sleep, and that worked out fine. 'Cept for the broken back and all that jazz. But eventually Bruce Wayne got back on top! So think about it. Batman went 4 weeks without sleep and he's not even really real. You should be able to top that no problem.

Good luck.... Sir.

That's a Fight Club reference too! Clever.
 

Hinton

New member
Try watching some TV (nothing overly exciting) or, as mentioned, go for a walk.

Not sure if you can get it, but this tea is pretty good as a sleep aid. It doesn't put you to sleep, it just helps relax you to get to sleep and stay asleep. Best of all (at least, in my experience) there isn't any grogginess the next morning.

http://www.houseofnutrition.com/bislwetea20t.html
 

evil tendencies

Cake or Death?
I had a thread like this up a few weeks ago - I really feel your pain. My insomnia is related to discontinuation of a powerful prescription med that makes you twitch when you stop taking it. My doctor told me that sleep aids with Diphenhydramine Sodium (Benadryl) would help, and they really do knock me out. Problem is, my body wakes up a few hours later, thinking that I'm just napping, and that my real bed time is actually like 4AM or something.

He just gave me some Melatonin stuff today. He says a few days of taking it will reset my internal clock, and I can get back to normal. Don't know if it'll work (I took my first dose about two seconds before I found this thread), but it's something to try.

If you want to know how it works, PM me and I'd be glad to compare notes.
 

breadhead

New member
I had a period of insomnia a few years ago, nothing as bad as a lot of people get but horrible none the less. The thing that would eventually put me to sleep was watching major league baseball on channel 5. Talk about a yawnfest.
 

Mourner

New member
a friend of mine is currently recovering from a severe case of insomnia he's had for about 2 years now, he's recently had his first "full" night of sleep in years. he spend 2 years sleeping a maximum of 1,5 hours a night (if he was lucky)

he actually went to the hospital, had a full neurological examination, prescription medication and a "sleep-psychologist". but the thing that probably helped him the most was setting himself a steady routine, get into bed at 23:30, and only get back out at 7:30.....
just trying to sleep, and getting some rest.

that said, since going to college, i've managed to screw up my day-night rythm pretty nicely myself.... (spend a time at school from 10-16, work from 17-23 and painting till 4, leaving myself some 4 hours s7to sleep each and every day)
something that helps me get to sleep is tv, especialy the discovery channel and NGC, channels with good narrative description.... something you don't have to necessarily watch, but is interresting nonetheless...

hope this helps
 

evil tendencies

Cake or Death?
Melatonin worked like a charm. Just realized some other folks here recommended it too. Still a bit sleepy - it's supposed to take a few days to reset everything - but I'm up and alert four hours before I have been in the last two months...nice!
 

Shawn R. L.

New member
During the day walk (or whatever is your choice of exercise) till you want to drop. Read before turning out the light - and by whatever means, progressively dim the light. Helps the body shift into sleep mode.
 

evil tendencies

Cake or Death?
During the day walk (or whatever is your choice of exercise) till you want to drop. Read before turning out the light - and by whatever means, progressively dim the light. Helps the body shift into sleep mode.

Some lamps can be programmed to dim over a set period of time. Don't know what they're called, or I'd give a link.
 
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