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Why your brain keeps overthinking at night – and how to switch it off


Woman cannot fall asleep at night lying on the bed.

Stress hormones often override your sleep hormones (Picture: Getty Images/iStockphoto)

Over the last few weeks, I’ve found it impossible to drift off to sleep at a reasonable time. 

My body will be positively knackered but my brain refuses to shut off, and so I lie there, eyes wide open in the dark, attempting to count sheep. 

The problem is that my thoughts tend to spiral when I’m in bed: they’re not necessarily anxious thoughts, they could be about anything, but I’ll go down rabbit holes about everything from what I need to do in the gym tomorrow to a conversation I had with a friend two weeks ago. 

Sleep problems aren’t foreign to me – I’ve always struggled to doze off – which is perhaps why it took me longer than I’d like to admit to link the tight sensation I’ve been feeling in my chest to the fact my brain won’t power down at night. 

While I haven’t been officially diagnosed, all signs point to me having anxiety, and descriptions of ‘high-functioning’ anxiety online somewhat resonate – though some clinicians question the use of the term.

What is ‘high-functioning’ anxiety impact and how can it affect your sleep?

‘There are no agreed diagnostic criteria for high-functioning anxiety, and many clinicians would question whether it exists in its own right, but most would agree that despite persistently high levels of generalised anxiety some people can continue to function very well,’ Professor John Groeger, a lecturer in psychology and director of Sleep Well Science at Nottingham Trent University, tells Metro.co.uk.

Although anxiety in this form isn’t debilitating, says John, ‘the worry, fatigue, sleep loss, feelings of anger, etc will ultimately wear down even the hardest campaigner’.

The problem when anxiety manifests in this way, is that many people might not even register they’re dealing with it – and anxiety, high-functioning or not, can be a key driver of sleep struggles. 

‘We can only sleep when we are sufficiently exhausted (and hence unable to worry!) or sufficiently relaxed,’ says John. 

‘Stress will delay our sleep, because we are simply too aroused to relax.’

Dr Meg Arroll, a clinical psychologist and author of Tiny Traumas: When you don’t know what’s wrong, but nothing feels quite right, tells Metro.co.uk that this is because ‘the stress response triggered by anxious thoughts overrides the sleep drive as it is so key for survival.’ 

Essentially, if our body thinks we’re in danger (which is basically what anxiety is), it won’t want us to sleep for practical reasons, even when there is no real threat. 

Not being able to switch off in bed can be a sign of stress (Picture: Getty Images/iStockphoto)

The problem is, a lack of sleep can then contribute to our anxiety, causing a potentially infinite feedback loop.

‘After a stressful day, and a shortened or broken night’s sleep, we will function worse,’ says John.

‘Our concentration will be poorer, our intolerance greater, and the effort we need to make will increase. 

‘We will become more sensitive to, perhaps find it …read more

Source:: Metro

      

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