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What sleep hygiene do you practice? what sleep routines do you use?

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So I am getting to bed a bit later, and currently I am playing comedians in the background, and also news programs which is totally against conventional sleep hygiene - but it is soothing and I can sleep with them on. Wake up when they stop and start another one, which is a little silly I know, but it works.
 
So my sleep has fallen apart (yet again) and now I am back to not being able to get into bed. So I am comfort eating to get into bed. There is no danger now, but I am acting like there is.
 
My sleep has fallen apart yet again. I am having trouble going to bed at night. I live in a safe home. I have a safe partner. I have lots of waking and nightmares.
 
My sleep has fallen apart yet again. I am having trouble going to bed at night. I live in a safe home. I have a safe partner. I have lots of waking and nightmares
Didn’t you just move? On top of having a concussion? And changing jobs?

It would make total sense to me that my sleep would get a bit disrupted during major changes & stress... less that I need to completely redo my sleep hygiene, and more that I need to

- cut myself some slack
- amp up the self-care (hate that term)
- bleed stress / blow off steam more than standard, to help cope with the increased pressure ... even if I feel fine in the daytime, if it’s affecting my sleep it’s building up
- add in a little bit of extra time into my schedule to allow for all of ^^^ AND decompress time (meaning not just adding in an hour of tai chi or whatever, but also a half an hour to just sit and relax from relaxing ;), ditto an extra 5 minutes between activities -I usually have a few minutes between times anyway, just to let myself shift gears more fluidly- adding in some extra time to my extra time helps when I’m stressed. So does switching an hour “getting ready” to 1&15, or 5 minutes getting ready to 10 minutes.
- Enjoy/revel in my routines, as they’re getting settled into a new place / new schedule as well. Same routine, new place or new schedule? It’s an extra long first breath of coffee, it’s a pause to look around myself before starting off, it’s taking a bit of extra care as I steel a knife before using it. It’s enjoying the scent of my perfume as I apply it. Sure sure, general mindfulness, except not. Because it’s not general. It’s very specifically paying attention to the little rituals I always do everywhere. The things I take with me, wherever I go. Essentially saying “Hello, you! Nice to see you here, with me :D” I’ll stop paying attention to them again soon enough, but simply noticing them when other things are in flux, seems adds a sense of strength/stability. ((Much like in preventing separation anxiety in small children, always leaving/coming home in the same way, builds a sense of reliability. Kiss hello, waving goodbye, etc. But instead of soothing someone else’s anxiety via ritual, I’m soothing my own.))

The only sleep-sleep piece I’d personally hit are the subtle “home” things. Like making sure the scents are right (not the time to switch laundry detergent or buy new pillows!) aaaaaand a bit stronger than usual to counteract all the new-place smells (I usually accomplish this by using a tee-shirt as a pillowcase. Smells like me, smells like home. But I use tee shirts as pillowcases fairly often. It’s not a “new” thing for my brain to dissect textures and such as I’m trying to sleep.); and some of the sounds familiar, like the music I play.
 
Didn’t you just move? On top of having a concussion? And changing jobs?
The move has been more into my body and into my life. I was dissociated/depersonalised/derealised in regards my current living situation. I realised that I have to actually live here and take in the safety and love and care that is available so I am working on grounding. It is a bit tough going. I have stopped blocking things out as much. I have stopped comfort eating. I am not as dissociated, depersonalised or derealised as I was.

Yes I had a concussion.

I am doing casual teaching at the moment, so I have multiple jobs. I am working between about six schools, and doing a wide range of activities. I am thinking that being between schools is good to miss out on the politics but stressful walking into an unknown class with unknown content a lot of the time.

It would make total sense to me that my sleep would get a bit disrupted during major changes & stress... less that I need to completely redo my sleep hygiene, and more that I need to

- cut myself some slack
I am not good at this. I am really hard on myself.

- amp up the self-care (hate that term)
I am sure I know some of this, but I can't remember it. I am dissociated.

- bleed stress / blow off steam more than standard, to help cope with the increased pressure ... even if I feel fine in the daytime, if it’s affecting my sleep it’s building up
Yeah my sleep has been disrupted for a couple of months now. That is a fair call.

- add in a little bit of extra time into my schedule to allow for all of ^^^ AND decompress time (meaning not just adding in an hour of tai chi or whatever, but also a half an hour to just sit and relax from relaxing ;), ditto an extra 5 minutes between activities -I usually have a few minutes between times anyway, just to let myself shift gears more fluidly- adding in some extra time to my extra time helps when I’m stressed.
Okay that is a smart idea. I could try that.

- Enjoy/revel in my routines, as they’re getting settled into a new place / new schedule as well. Same routine, new place or new schedule? It’s an extra long first breath of coffee, it’s a pause to look around myself before starting off, it’s taking a bit of extra care as I steel a knife before using it. It’s enjoying the scent of my perfume as I apply it. Sure sure, general mindfulness, except not.
I need to start having cups of tea and breakfast on the veranda again - get into nature first thing in the day rather than getting lost in the chaos in my own head.

Because it’s not general. It’s very specifically paying attention to the little rituals I always do everywhere.
The thing is that I don't really have routines - that is what I am building up now - I would just go into blank/block/freeze mode and do nothing but binge watch TV or comfort eat. So that is a very useful suggestion that you make about routines and giving myself some time and space to change from one activity to another.

The things I take with me, wherever I go. Essentially saying “Hello, you! Nice to see you here, with me :D” I’ll stop paying attention to them again soon enough, but simply noticing them when other things are in flux, seems adds a sense of strength/stability.
I actually saw myself in the mirror today, and I was actually in my body. I talked to someone today and I was in my body. It was a shock. It's a big change.

((Much like in preventing separation anxiety in small children, always leaving/coming home in the same way, builds a sense of reliability. Kiss hello, waving goodbye, etc. But instead of soothing someone else’s anxiety via ritual, I’m soothing my own.))
Self soothing - good idea. I am really starting to combat my self hatred. I am actively doing that much more now.

The only sleep-sleep piece I’d personally hit are the subtle “home” things. Like making sure the scents are right (not the time to switch laundry detergent or buy new pillows!) aaaaaand a bit stronger than usual to counteract all the new-place smells (I usually accomplish this by using a tee-shirt as a pillowcase. Smells like me, smells like home. But I use tee shirts as pillowcases fairly often. It’s not a “new” thing for my brain to dissect textures and such as I’m trying to sleep.); and some of the sounds familiar, like the music I play.
I did buy new pillows and did have a few rough nights.

Thanks for that. That is most useful.
 
To those of you who live with a partner, does your sleep hygiene interfere with theirs? How do you mitigate?

I don't do much. I've tried a few of the standard things, but they do nothing for me, if anything, they make it worse.

These days, I absolutely cannot sleep in total darkness. Nor quietness. We listen to audiobooks while falling asleep. If I wake up again after the timer stopped, I have a hard time falling back asleep (unless I'm really exhausted). For many years in the past I've been sleeping/falling asleep with the TV on. I tend to/used to sit in front of a screen right until bedtime, working - everytime I tried to cut screen time way before bedtime and/or do something soothing, I slept even worse. Unless I was really really really tired from the day. Autogenic training before falling asleep did absolutely nothing for me.

I have fairly regular bedtimes. But they interfere with my internal clock, which probably doesn't help and leave me with social jetlag most of the time.

Co-sleeping with my cats (and dog in the past) helps.

Coffeine and other stimulants are a hit or miss. Some days, they don't do nothing all day (even when I could really need them) and when I least expect it, boom, that 3pm latte really hits at 11pm. Soothing teas etc. don't seem to help either way.

Back in Europe, I LOVED going to the sauna in the evening (I went at least once a week) and that worked wonders. Missing these dearly.
 
Trying to sleep on the other side of the bed to see if that helps with the pain in my hip.
This has really fallen apart over the last several months.
 
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