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Anxiety-fueled thoughts are one of the main drivers of insomnia.
As night approaches, anxious thoughts tend to ramp up.
Then they often return with a vengeance in the middle of the night.
For many, it can feel like walking on eggshells inside your mind, fearful that one catastrophic thought will kick off a chain reaction that ruins the entire night.
It’s a frustrating and lonely place to be.
But there’s good news:
How you relate to your thoughts can radically change how much anxiety and distress they cause.
And that means you can reduce the dirty pain that insomnia adds to your life.
Two main techniques can help:
Let’s start with the first.
Thought Challenging: From Panic to PerspectiveChallenging your thoughts doesn’t mean arguing with yourself all night.
It means:
Let’s take an example.
You’re lying in bed and think:
“I’ll never get through tomorrow if I don’t sleep now.”
Pause.
Can you remember a time you barely slept and still made it through the day?
Even better, can you remember a time you thought you’d crash—but by evening realized the day wasn’t nearly as bad as you feared?
Now, another example:
“If I don’t sleep tonight, I’ll get too anxious to sleep tomorrow, and soon I’ll never sleep again.”
Thoughts like this are truly not grounded in reality.
Remind yourself of the sleep drive:
The longer you go without sleep, the more your body pushes for it.
You will sleep eventually. Your body is wired for it.
And insomnia?
It can feel miserable, but it’s not fatal. (Seriously.)
A Simple Framework to Challenge a Distressing Thought1. What’s happening?
2. What’s your interpretation?
3. How do you feel?
4. Now challenge the thought:
5. Re-evaluate:
You don’t have to go through all of these questions every time.
Just catching yourself in the middle of a dramatic thought and asking, “Is that 100% true?” can be enough to ground you.
When Thought Challenging Falls ShortThere are limits.
Sometimes, challenging your thoughts won’t be enough to feel better—especially if the anxiety is based on something plausible (like feeling tired tomorrow).
And sometimes, we turn thought-challenging into a desperate attempt to control our anxiety, which keeps us locked in the struggle.
That’s why we need another tool: changing your relationship with thoughts.
We’ll cover that next time—and it might be the most freeing shift you ever make.
To peaceful sleep,
Ivo at End Insomnia
Why should you listen to me?
I recovered from insomnia after 5 brutal years of suffering. I also wrote a book about it. I've now coached many on how to end their insomnia for good in 8 weeks.
Anxiety-fueled thoughts are one of the main drivers of insomnia.
As night approaches, anxious thoughts tend to ramp up.
Then they often return with a vengeance in the middle of the night.
For many, it can feel like walking on eggshells inside your mind, fearful that one catastrophic thought will kick off a chain reaction that ruins the entire night.
It’s a frustrating and lonely place to be.
But there’s good news:
How you relate to your thoughts can radically change how much anxiety and distress they cause.
And that means you can reduce the dirty pain that insomnia adds to your life.
Two main techniques can help:
Let’s start with the first.
Thought Challenging: From Panic to PerspectiveChallenging your thoughts doesn’t mean arguing with yourself all night.
It means:
Let’s take an example.
You’re lying in bed and think:
“I’ll never get through tomorrow if I don’t sleep now.”
Pause.
Can you remember a time you barely slept and still made it through the day?
Even better, can you remember a time you thought you’d crash—but by evening realized the day wasn’t nearly as bad as you feared?
Now, another example:
“If I don’t sleep tonight, I’ll get too anxious to sleep tomorrow, and soon I’ll never sleep again.”
Thoughts like this are truly not grounded in reality.
Remind yourself of the sleep drive:
The longer you go without sleep, the more your body pushes for it.
You will sleep eventually. Your body is wired for it.
And insomnia?
It can feel miserable, but it’s not fatal. (Seriously.)
A Simple Framework to Challenge a Distressing Thought1. What’s happening?
2. What’s your interpretation?
3. How do you feel?
4. Now challenge the thought:
5. Re-evaluate:
You don’t have to go through all of these questions every time.
Just catching yourself in the middle of a dramatic thought and asking, “Is that 100% true?” can be enough to ground you.
When Thought Challenging Falls ShortThere are limits.
Sometimes, challenging your thoughts won’t be enough to feel better—especially if the anxiety is based on something plausible (like feeling tired tomorrow).
And sometimes, we turn thought-challenging into a desperate attempt to control our anxiety, which keeps us locked in the struggle.
That’s why we need another tool: changing your relationship with thoughts.
We’ll cover that next time—and it might be the most freeing shift you ever make.
To peaceful sleep,
Ivo at End Insomnia
Why should you listen to me?
I recovered from insomnia after 5 brutal years of suffering. I also wrote a book about it. I've now coached many on how to end their insomnia for good in 8 weeks.