I thought I would start a new post on this as it has been mentioned quite frequently of late.
Sleep has probably been mentioned in other posts too, and also in Anthony's documents he has written, but from personal experience, I did not read through every post when I first joined. We have quite a big following whether they be members or non-members. The other issue is that no veteran on this site is at the exact stage of recovery as any other veteran. So here goes....
This is just my opinion and some info that I learnt on the PTSD course I did, also some stuff that has worked for me..
Military conditioning plays a major part in my opinion. Whether being Army, Navy, Airforce etc, it is drilled into us very early to sleep lightly so we can respond to attack, alarms or just to get up for sentry/guard/security patrol etc, etc. So when we come out of our respective boot camps, we have transitioned from a teenager who sleeps in, to a service person who can respond and act at a moments notice.
No lets add warlike service whether it be land or sea. You sleep even more lightly because of the threat of attack, and after an attack, you sleep even more lightly again. In my opinion, you don't enter that REM sleep that deep sleep we all need to 'Reset' our brains as Deb mentioned in another post. I call it our period where we file away the days activities into memories.
So, when a trauma happens and we are away on warlike service, we don't get to sort it out and file it away. Back home you would have counselling straight away to help with that filing, or sick leave and counselling depending how bad the trauma is. But when you see death and destruction every day and your life is at risk every day and this is for a prolonged period of six months or more, its like there is a whole filing cabinet of thoughts, events, traumas has been picked up and just dumped on the floor. Then we return home.
So, we are home with our families. How do you expect to just sleep through the night like nothing is happening? Some people can. Other people self medicate. They drink themselves into unconsciousness. The problem is you are in a stupor, and unconscious. You are still not in REM sleep. So you try sleeping medication, once again, this just alters your consciousness, you are still not in REM sleep. And when you do manage to fall into a deep REM sleep, you are faced with that upturned filing cabinet. No wonder you have nightmares.
The only way to deal with that filing cabinet is by therapy, un-training, and sometimes medication, otherwise it will always be there. Like the boxes you have not unpacked from your last move. Its a long and drawn out process, but you will get there eventually.
The last part of this is what I was taught and that is 'Sleep Hygiene'. Make sure you have a comfortable bed, make sure you have a comfortable pillow. Get rid of the TV and the clock radio.
Sleep generally comes in waves of approx 90 min apparently. You know when you stay up to watch a program and your dog tired 30 min before it, but if you push through, you end up wide awake. They say what you should do is wait for that moment to try and sleep.
No coffee or caffeine from about 2 pm onwards, that was hard for me.
Just my thoughts.
Sleep has probably been mentioned in other posts too, and also in Anthony's documents he has written, but from personal experience, I did not read through every post when I first joined. We have quite a big following whether they be members or non-members. The other issue is that no veteran on this site is at the exact stage of recovery as any other veteran. So here goes....
This is just my opinion and some info that I learnt on the PTSD course I did, also some stuff that has worked for me..
Military conditioning plays a major part in my opinion. Whether being Army, Navy, Airforce etc, it is drilled into us very early to sleep lightly so we can respond to attack, alarms or just to get up for sentry/guard/security patrol etc, etc. So when we come out of our respective boot camps, we have transitioned from a teenager who sleeps in, to a service person who can respond and act at a moments notice.
No lets add warlike service whether it be land or sea. You sleep even more lightly because of the threat of attack, and after an attack, you sleep even more lightly again. In my opinion, you don't enter that REM sleep that deep sleep we all need to 'Reset' our brains as Deb mentioned in another post. I call it our period where we file away the days activities into memories.
So, when a trauma happens and we are away on warlike service, we don't get to sort it out and file it away. Back home you would have counselling straight away to help with that filing, or sick leave and counselling depending how bad the trauma is. But when you see death and destruction every day and your life is at risk every day and this is for a prolonged period of six months or more, its like there is a whole filing cabinet of thoughts, events, traumas has been picked up and just dumped on the floor. Then we return home.
So, we are home with our families. How do you expect to just sleep through the night like nothing is happening? Some people can. Other people self medicate. They drink themselves into unconsciousness. The problem is you are in a stupor, and unconscious. You are still not in REM sleep. So you try sleeping medication, once again, this just alters your consciousness, you are still not in REM sleep. And when you do manage to fall into a deep REM sleep, you are faced with that upturned filing cabinet. No wonder you have nightmares.
The only way to deal with that filing cabinet is by therapy, un-training, and sometimes medication, otherwise it will always be there. Like the boxes you have not unpacked from your last move. Its a long and drawn out process, but you will get there eventually.
The last part of this is what I was taught and that is 'Sleep Hygiene'. Make sure you have a comfortable bed, make sure you have a comfortable pillow. Get rid of the TV and the clock radio.
Sleep generally comes in waves of approx 90 min apparently. You know when you stay up to watch a program and your dog tired 30 min before it, but if you push through, you end up wide awake. They say what you should do is wait for that moment to try and sleep.
No coffee or caffeine from about 2 pm onwards, that was hard for me.
Just my thoughts.