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Insomnia is a vicious cycle.
Worrying about sleep makes it hard to sleep, and not sleeping makes you worry even more. A Stanford study recently confirmed this.
This worry can lead you to do things that make sleeping more challenging.
After a while, your body might learn to be wide awake at bedtime, even if you’re not trying to be.
This is called “conditioned hyperarousal.”
—
Looking to end insomnia for good in 8 weeks? Get my FREE cheat sheet:
The 7 Proven Steps I Used to Beat Insomnia After 5 Years of Hell—Without Pills, CBT-i, or Useless Sleep Hacks
Insomnia is a vicious cycle.
Worrying about sleep makes it hard to sleep, and not sleeping makes you worry even more. A Stanford study recently confirmed this.
This worry can lead you to do things that make sleeping more challenging.
After a while, your body might learn to be wide awake at bedtime, even if you’re not trying to be.
This is called “conditioned hyperarousal.”
—
Looking to end insomnia for good in 8 weeks? Get my FREE cheat sheet:
The 7 Proven Steps I Used to Beat Insomnia After 5 Years of Hell—Without Pills, CBT-i, or Useless Sleep Hacks