this post was submitted on 10 Oct 2024
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I dealt with this for a while, although I don't think that it was depression related. I think it was more to with stress from work/ moving.
Exercise is good, I think going to bed earlier is counterproductive. You may want to look at sleep restriction therapy- the idea is that you are trying to minimize the time you spend in bed while not asleep.
What do you do when you wake up? Keep in mind that waking up in the middle of the night is completely normal- everyone does it, it's just normally you fall right back asleep and don't think about it. Are you scrolling on your phone, getting up or just laying there? Definitely don't look at your phone at all, that's probably the most important aspect of sleep hygiene.
Ultimately I think for me what helped me get over this was just becoming "zen" about waking up early. When it first started happening to me I was thinking "ah shit not again! I need to relax right now to fall back to sleep! Oh no another 30 minutes have passed and I'm still awake!". But over time I would just wake up early and be like "eh whatever, hopefully I can get back to sleep." Being okay with not falling back asleep makes it easier to fall back to sleep, it's kind of a catch-22.
Other things that have helped:
-Going back to the being chill about waking up early, try taking magnesium glycinate. Again I wouldn't treat this as a long term fix but it might help short term. It's a mild sedative, I find it helps me sleep more deeply and relax.
-Are you getting cold? I have a high metabolism and I get colder as the night goes on. Adding an extra blanket when you wake up might help you fall back to sleep by lowering your metabolism.
-if you're laying awake for more than an hour it's time to get up. That goes back to the sleep hygiene thing as well. You want to make your bedroom a sleep sanctuary. During the day keep your time in the bedroom to a bare minimum and don't go to bed until you feel properly tired.
I hope it gets better for you m8. Improving sleep is tricky because it's not something you can actively try at, at least not the same way you exercise or something. I should add that there are super-short-duration antidepressants that you can take to fall back to sleep. There mentioned to me by a doctor although I never took them so I don't remember the name of the drug.
All sounds like workable advice, thanks bud. Appreciate the long reply