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Bordo66

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Hey i've read some stories but I wanted to ask, am I the only one who really gets the need to cry when I try to sleep? I always feel so sad when I try to sleep. Like at this moment I'm in my bed and my face is like:( I know I have to cry and I know ill feel a bit better once I crt but it hardly ever comes out (maybe 2 times max). Unless im uber tired this happens to me every night.

P.S. Now that I think about it I sometimes have random nightmares but I can't really remember them. I used to have nightmares almost every night when I was 10 or so but I never knew I had em. I always heard the next morning: had a nightmare again? It seemed I was litterly screaming my lungs out!
 
My fiance gets really depressed when it's time to go to bed. He's not a crier, though, he won't let himself. I think it's because to sleep, you have to relax some of your control and we don't realize how much of our emotions and selves we strictly control throughout our days just to seem normal and get by. So in moments of relaxation, these things HAVE to come out. That's my take, anyways.
 
We don't realize how much of our emotions and selves we strictly control throughout our days just to seem normal and get by. So in moments of relaxation, these things HAVE to come out.
I agree with Reclusive, and I also experience this. I actually want to cry when I am going to sleep and when I wake up, so I often both avoid going to sleep and then in the morning waking up--very frustrating. At night, I feel suddenly flooded by everything I didn't let myself think about, and in the morning, I am flooded by all of the things I will have to think about that day and all of the things I shouldn't think about and the glimpses of nightmares that I had the previous night. Yeesh. This makes my fiance pretty mad, so I've been working on distracting my mind and having healthy bedtime rituals.

Here is a suggestion for a ritual I used to follow to help with insomnia/being overwhelmed before I went to bed/nightmares/difficulty staying asleep (waking up screaming or crying). I apologize that it is so long, but I have gone back to this ritual regularly and it has always helped me.

First, listen to your sleep cycle. I get sleepy at about 11:20PM every night, have done this for years. It's something that I had to pay close attention to before I could isolate the time, though, as anxiety surrounding sleep usually makes me ignore the subtle changes in my body that signal my natural drowsiness. After I isolated this time, I would prepare to go to sleep at about 9 or 9:30 by not engaging in anything that required focus or emotional engagement. No games, no heavy reading, no movie or shows for an audience above the age of 10. I usually watched children shows or movies for a little while to destress, had some soothing herbal tea with a dash of honey, no sweets otherwise. I covered my bedroom in a lavender scent, particularly my pillow. I thin lavender and mint are both supposed to induce relaxation/sleepiness? Not sure about mint. I dimmed the lights about 40 minutes before I had to go to sleep and would not stimulate myself with anything 2D--no computer or TV. Instead, I did things like knit or draw, something meditative and relaxing. Putting puzzles together could also be fun unless it causes you some sort of stress. Grooming tends to soothe me, so I would often spend time doing personal maintenance things (polishing my nails, brushing my hair) and listening to soothing, feel-good, quiet music. Before I went to sleep, I would journal for 10-20 minutes about my day, what I was thinking about, ect., NOT while in bed, somewhere away from where I slept. I also stored the journal away from where I slept. I would then get into bed, turn off the light, and begin some simple in through the nose out through the mouth breathing exercises while envisioning my breathing pushing negative energy out of my body and filling it with good energy, usually illustrated in my mind with contrasting colors (black for bad and purple for good or some such), concentrating on nothing but my physical body and trying to relax each segment as I went, taking my time on each piece of myself. I was usually passed out by the time I got to my hands or knees. If I wake up and feel disturbed, I would journal for another 10 minutes before starting my day, usually writing down what I remember of my dreams and what my hopes and fears were for the day.

I'm sorry that was so long, but this has been a huge help to my problems with sleeping. It's something I developed for myself by just identifying my stressors, every little thing, and by keeping in mind that I cope well with writing and drawing in terms of getting things off of my chest. Storing my journal away from my bed was key, though. I know all this sounds a little hippy-dippy but it really worked for me. I hope you sleep well tonight and feel good when your head hits the pillow.
 
Hey thanks for responding,

I see it's quite the ritual but to be honest I gamed away my problems for a LONG time, gaming is my moment NOT to think of my problems so I do it for hours and hours and hours, hell I play so much league of legends my cod2 clan gets tired of it xD!
 
I feel you there, Bordo. I got off of gaming when I went to school, but sometimes I relapse. I try not to provide an opportunity for myself, but I recently discovered Prototype for XBox and when Diablo III finally comes out I'll be toast. I think I had actually just gotten off of Need for Speed Underground when I began this ritual. If you have a PS3, I recommend Flower, an independently made game with no violence or competition. It sounds a little lame, but it's actually really good fun, the music is incredible and soothing, it's purely feel-good, and you gain achievements for staying away for the game for ten minutes, a day, a week, ect. It sounds like a weird game, but if that's something you really enjoy, it's $10 and would be the kind of thing I would recommend in place of child's media if you aren't into that. I wasn't really, myself, but it did calm me.
 
Another night where I try to sleep but doesnt seem to come! I'm sleepy but can't sleep, I open some relaxing music on my phone and then I start thinking about what happend in the past and I make a magical connection to a possible nightmare, a lot of times I keep thinking ill get a nightmare while being in the army and I'm not and haven't been. I really wanted to join the army though. God I hate trying to sleep!!!!
 
Have you tried guided visualizations? There's a lot of them online that you can find that help direct your mind and relax your body.

I'm probably going to be up late tonight because of an evil spider.
 
Bordo, I notice you're in the Netherlands.

Aren't there... sleep aides available that may help take the edge off as you're falling asleep?
 
What kind of visualizations or what kind of spider? I think you mean the later. It was either a garden spider or a grass spider, we're pretty sure. But it was evil - right down to the core, I KNOW it.
 
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