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Night Terrors Advice

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I've come here for some help and support re: my night terrors. I am afraid to sleep because of them, and I am also far too afraid/nervous to fall asleep beyond REM stage, because I am too, too terrified, I'll wake up and find I'm back to being a child and under the authority of my abusive, demonic father.....I suffer exhaustion, depression, lethargy and persistent sadness during the day :-(

Some things I have found helps - having a night light right next to my bed. Making a safe space of my room (nothing scary or triggering), my childhood blanket, a big, soft, cuddly bear, no TV, just reading, using an electric bed so I can sleep with head slightly raised -f or some reason, lying flat on a soft pillow GUARANTEES night terrors.

Like everyone else, I Want Them to Stop, I want to start living. I am bit a lost, as new to this PTSD forum - I have sevdere/complex PTSD due to a lifetime of severe domestic violence - from my father to my foster carers, thro to my first husband, my church pastor (ok, that's not domestic...but I spent so much time there, and it was all so tight knit and there was so much control and involvement in their building an dmy home, it can be classed as "domestic"), then my eldest son, followed by my youngest son, and now with my current husband (who only gets nasty if he isn't allowed his own way, which thankfully is mostly being allowed to "live" in his bedroom, and be left in peace).

If I'm not having a night terror, then I am either tossing and turning, or living a second life in the most fantasmagorical dreams.
 
Hi, welcome to the site and well done on your first post . You will find everyone on the forum welcoming and supportive.

I am sorry that you are going through this. Can i ask, are you in Therapy and if not have you considered therapy to help you?
I too suffer with night terrors and have woken up to find myself shaking in a corner of my bedroom. I am in Therapy and i have worked on and learned mindfulness relaxation techniques to help me settle and relax before i go to bed, this along with the therapy has helped. I also have music and my earphones next to my bed as i find listenening to certain music also 'clears' my head and helps me sleep and stay asleep. There are mindfulness and sleep exercises etc available on line or via apps. Another technique i use (i got this idea from someone on the site and my therapist) is having somewhere to write down/note down how im feeling after a terror or whats happened during the terror, if i want i can then review the notes and process what happened, can share with my therapist or just throw it away. Its my choice.
I still dont have a lot of sleep ( bed time is not my fave time) but i have made massive improvements. I still do have some night terrors but they have reduced and using the above also helps me settle following a terror. I did see a link between how tense i was before i went to bed/sleep and i think this is why the above helped.
Sorry, i feel like ive gone on! Just wanted to share how i have dealt with the horrible thing that are night terrors.
I wish you all the best.
MC
 
Welcome to the forum. I found this on-site community because I was avoiding sleep out of fear of nightmares. One bad night I decided to check out the chat room and noticed sleep terrors and avoidance are quite common. One of the members helped me get my mind focused on other thoughts and this helped me relax enough to sleep. Now when I wake from a nightmare I go online, read a forum or chat for a few minutes about something to get nightmare out off my thoughts and then I am able to go back to sleep knowing I am not alone and I can reach out any time of the day. This relieved anxiety as I didn't want to wake my supportive friends, but sometimes really needed someone to chat with in early hours.
 
I am sorry for what you have experience and for the night terrors -they suck! I am taking prazosin -it helps a lot .

Welcome-this forum is wonderful
 
:hug:@BrokenButNotDefeated , Welcome!

Night terrors are aweful! I'm sorry that you are suffering from them. Since I lived through them, I have a sense of what you are going through, and I can share the variety of things that worked to free me. (I needed to get to the point that I was so miserable that I was willing to try things out of my comfort zone; then I would try anything that was safe and affordable.)

I know that every person's situation (personality, comfort zones, economics, supports, etc.) are unique. Take your time, as best you can, consistently explore the options until you notice a change. Finding safe circumstances and safe and respectful people with whom to work; these are key.

Since I wanted to be as comfortable as possible
and since I also wanted to explore and release the root causes of my nightmares, I used a variety of useful options at the same time, and explored traditional and unconventional at the same time. Do your recovery your way, it is the only way, as you follow what is seems right for you.

1. I created a network of safe people, spend time with people who are utterly respectful, and found a safe group of people to spend time with.

I found a therapist (it took some time to find one I relaxed with and that was affordable), I started to attend Alanon (many people understand and deal with trauma, I didn't have to talk, and the structure of the group provided safety. I had the option to speak about my problems and find support.).

2. I started to do a body centered meditation , like found in Mindfulness, and Vipassanna- using body awareness and body scanning, meditations. This helped me relax, listen to my body, and connect to a level of peace that I could not find in my sleeping or waking life. (No need to spend money, just search the web. Practice at your own rate, with eyes open or closed, sitting or walking.)

3. I found a safe therapist; someone who let me move at my speed, and who wasn't pushy, and with whom I relaxed. I learned how to speak about, and to feel my feelings, of night night terrors. Since I noticed anxiety after sharing my night terrors, I made sure to connect to a safe person and activity, afterwards.

A. I needed to find two therapists: in my case I found one who like to listen and talk, and then I found a second therapist-that I used occasionally, who helped me express anger and rage-without being re-raumatizing to myself. (As a child, I was never allowed to speak up, or verbally defend myself.)

4. One by one, objectively (as possible) I considered I what skill that I-the person in the dream, needed to be free. Then I found a way in real life to develop that skill.

A. For example, in one layer of my nightmares, I was being strangled-I couldn't breath. So I studied an actor based voice and breathing technique (Linklater) for 2 years. Finally, I had a breakthrough and the nightmares stopped.

B. Another layer of nightmares were about being violated. The only self-defense class that resolved this layer of night terrors was Model Mugging. (Totally worth the cost.)

C. Another layer of nightmares were about being held at the stake or at gunpoint (a childhood trauma during my parents divorce dispute). What resolved these nightmares was taking a handgun safety class; my best friend took it with me to provide some support for me. (Check around for different prices of a 2 day workshop; in my area it varies from $50-$250.)

5. I explored movement of various kinds. I needed a for that allowed me to choose my motions (since as a child I wasn't allowed to move). I ended up learning a form of the Alexander Technique that lets the student choose their actions. It is somewhat similar to Feldenkrais work. I have interest in Authentic Movement, but haven't been able to afford it. I enjoy doing yoga on my own.

6. Getting gentle and deep tissue massage freed up/released layers of depression-feelings stored in my tissues). It was a skill to learn how to relax while having deep tissue work, somewhat like going through childbirth. I found someone who worked with me, at the level I could comfortably allow, so I didn't get traumatized from deep tissue work.

7. I took care to find a psychiatrist who helped me by giving me meds to sleep and to regulate my anxiety and depression. Know that it may take a few tries to find the right meds. Keep kindly being an advocate for yourself, let the doctor know if you are not getting relief. Understand they often will start with the least strong meds and move to the stronger meds, as they look for something that is effective.

8. Over time, I dropped family and other relationships, if people were not consistently kind and respectful.

9. Be creative; play with giving yourself a way to connect to the depth of your pain while you express yourself; I like to write and dance, other people like to draw, make music and sign. Sharing your expression with others can be another step of healing.

10. Even though I didn't believe it at first, I greatly benefited from "grounding" techniques. I used one, where daily for three months, I imagined the earth's energy coming into the souls of my feet. This helped me connect to a neural energy source/the earth, instead of continuing to run off of my 'negatively charged' past experiences.

I just spent 60 seconds each morning and each evening, imagining the earth's energy bubble into the souls of my feet. after 30 days I felt a shift This was an easy an expensive one to start practicing.

10. Know that you will find a way through the night terrors. May seem odd to say, but see the night terrors as a means, to find further healing, and restore wholeness to yourself.

**I so much appreciate your sharing what you are going through. I believe in you and send you healing thoughts. You are not alone. Take good care!
 
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What wonderful advice @Vandya. I also find grounding helpful in a similar way. I image the sun warmth is a golden glow that surround me and I can breathe in. Then fall through my feat into the earth.

I'm sorry for your night terrors. I have an extra nightdress and spare pillows as I sweat like hell when I have them.

Sending positive energy :)
 
I've come here for some help and support re: my night terrors. I am afraid to sleep becau...
Well, I think anyone with past and present domestic issues is bound to face night terrors one way or another. I hate those too, I want to scold myself because I often dream that I am living with some people that I hate the most: I often dream that I am living in the same place than my abusive father, abusive ex....

Then I wake up and think: how could I possibly have had that dream? And sometimes it takes me a good half an hour to get past that kind of dream, I mean like my brain is not quite there yet as if I am together with a person that I do not ever want to be together with.

Soooooo weird
 
Just found you all here and am helped by knowing others struggle w sleep as I do. Bad nightmare last pm - best friends abandoned me and I was screaming and raging at them. Woke exhausted. Haven't left apt all day. Dialed into phone Mtgs but done nothing else. Tired and scared. Am taking notes on some of what you have done to deal w this. Thank you
 
it takes some time and practice but you can develop a set of conditioned responses to fall into when you find yourself awake and in a full alert panic terror,

Think about how the military trains combatants for battle. They train the roles and responses to the point that reactions to danger are second nature, they happen without thought. My training for firefighting was much the same, order A brought response A. order B brought response B, no hesitation or even consideration for the fear of suiting up and entering burning buildings. Think about your insurance card that you carry in your wallet so you have the necessary information if you are in an accident or stopped by police. On the back is a list of actions and things to do and things not to do, a type of conditioned response to fall into and get you through a stressful time.

I have a few things I do without thinking when I find myself awake and in a state of terror. I look at my clock radio, it tells me I am in my room in my bed. I touch my wifes hair. I am not alone. I try to calmly listen to her breathing, the noises of the house, the breathing of our dogs at the foot of the bed, I am safe. I might turn on a radio, I am alive and alert and the world is still turning on its axis and I can think about the news or a human interest story on the BBC or NPR.

And sometimes I get up and go in the other room and sob. Oh well.
 
I've had NTs since I was a teenager so I understand how upsetting and distuptive they can be and I really feel for you. Sometimes I seem to manage mine quite well, othertimes my sleeping activities are totally out of control. Sounds like you have some good things in place to help sel-sooth (blanket and teddy bear)

Temperature and light are two things I've identified as key factors in mine - if I'm too hot, I seem to be more susceptible to having one and also if the room is light/shadowy. So, I try to keep my body temperature cool in bed and also try to get the room as dark as possible - black out blinds have helped me a lot. Sleep masks have sometimes helped - othertimes I've just ripped the mask off my face mid-NT!

I always make sure there's nothing around on the floor around the bed that I can trip over or run into.

I also now use a sleep app to fall asleep to and this seems to help - though it took a while and many apps to find one that really helped.

I also went through a stage of doing 15 mins or so of diaphragmatic breathing exercises just before bed, to stimulate my parasympathetic nervous system. This helped me to get to sleep and stay asleep and have a calmer night's sleep - reduced my nightmares and night terrors. And, at the time, I think I was also doing the breathing exercises a couple of other times in the day too. I've fallen off the wagon with that practise so should probably start trying to get back into that routine again - current sleep situation not great, so this has been a useful reminder to myself!

And, at the suggestion of my therapist, I also recently started sleeping with a cuddly toy - he's my old favourite childhood toy, so my therapist looks for ways to use him as a transitional object as part of our therapy. If I have a NT or wake up with a start from a nightmare, I do find myself giving him a cuddle and it does help to comfort me. So...keep hugging your bear ;-)

Good luck...I hope you find some ways to ease the disturbance and get some more restful sleep.
 
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