The Sleeping Disorders Thread
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- Longhorned
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The Sleeping Disorders Thread
What you got?
I got sleeping paralysis.
I got sleeping paralysis.
- Chicat
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Re: The Sleeping Disorders Thread
Can't fall asleep
Can't stay asleep
Can't sleep in
I miss my ambien prescription. I should pick up another one of those.
Can't stay asleep
Can't sleep in
I miss my ambien prescription. I should pick up another one of those.
Of the 12 coaches, Rush picked the one whose fans have the deepest passion, the longest memories, the greatest lung capacity and … did I mention deep passion?
Re: The Sleeping Disorders Thread
That's rough.Chicat wrote:Can't fall asleep
Can't stay asleep
Can't sleep in
I miss my ambien prescription. I should pick up another one of those.
Have you considered jogging or adding some exercise?
- Longhorned
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Re: The Sleeping Disorders Thread
What about just plain ol' Benedryl? My doctor said I can take that every night forever with no bad consequences.Chicat wrote:Can't fall asleep
Can't stay asleep
Can't sleep in
I miss my ambien prescription. I should pick up another one of those.
- 77HoyaCat4Ever
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Re: The Sleeping Disorders Thread
Perpetual insomniac here
brought on by years of taking call
I sleep 4-5 hours max a night
Haven't had a nap since the Nap Thread died
brought on by years of taking call
I sleep 4-5 hours max a night
Haven't had a nap since the Nap Thread died
- Chicat
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Re: The Sleeping Disorders Thread
I don't like the Benedryl hangover. I'm foggy for hours. I wake up from Ambien ready to kick ass.Longhorned wrote:What about just plain ol' Benedryl? My doctor said I can take that every night forever with no bad consequences.Chicat wrote:Can't fall asleep
Can't stay asleep
Can't sleep in
I miss my ambien prescription. I should pick up another one of those.
Of the 12 coaches, Rush picked the one whose fans have the deepest passion, the longest memories, the greatest lung capacity and … did I mention deep passion?
- Longhorned
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Re: The Sleeping Disorders Thread
We'll have to bring back the nap thread even if it's just for you and me, Hoya.
Re: The Sleeping Disorders Thread
The Nap thread... Oh boy77HoyaCat4Ever wrote:Perpetual insomniac here
brought on by years of taking call
I sleep 4-5 hours max a night
Haven't had a nap since the Nap Thread died
- Longhorned
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Re: The Sleeping Disorders Thread
Re-fill! Re-fill! Re-fill! Re-fill! Gooooooooooooooo drugs!Chicat wrote:I don't like the Benedryl hangover. I'm foggy for hours. I wake up from Ambien ready to kick ass.Longhorned wrote:What about just plain ol' Benedryl? My doctor said I can take that every night forever with no bad consequences.Chicat wrote:Can't fall asleep
Can't stay asleep
Can't sleep in
I miss my ambien prescription. I should pick up another one of those.
- Chicat
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Re: The Sleeping Disorders Thread
Better living through chemistry.
Of the 12 coaches, Rush picked the one whose fans have the deepest passion, the longest memories, the greatest lung capacity and … did I mention deep passion?
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Re: The Sleeping Disorders Thread
It's very easy for me to not go to bed. I have to literally force myself to go to bed. I can easily veg out on TV, movies, etc until the 2/3/4 am marks. Can be mood based, but can literally hit in the midst of a TV show and all of a sudden I can't sleep until I've watched an entire season. I often times fall asleep on the couch or recliner and wake up at first light.
- Longhorned
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Re: The Sleeping Disorders Thread
That's what Seinfeld described as the impulse for entertainment as the only thing that sleep can't overcome. Sometimes I feel like I'm too tired to get myself ready for bed, and it 's easier just to keep watching Netflix.JMarkJohns wrote:It's very easy for me to not go to bed. I have to literally force myself to go to bed. I can easily veg out on TV, movies, etc until the 2/3/4 am marks. Can be mood based, but can literally hit in the midst of a TV show and all of a sudden I can't sleep until I've watched an entire season. I often times fall asleep on the couch or recliner and wake up at first light.
Re: The Sleeping Disorders Thread
Read a book. That helps me too.
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Re: The Sleeping Disorders Thread
Yes... Plus I've always been an active thinker at night, even in bed. Late night threads at the old site all those years ago didn't help. And now I have TiVo, Netflix, Amazon Prime, OnDemand, HBO, Sports 24/7.... Not to mention my own DVD collections.Longhorned wrote:That's what Seinfeld described as the impulse for entertainment as the only thing that sleep can't overcome. Sometimes I feel like I'm too tired to get myself ready for bed, and it 's easier just to keep watching Netflix.JMarkJohns wrote:It's very easy for me to not go to bed. I have to literally force myself to go to bed. I can easily veg out on TV, movies, etc until the 2/3/4 am marks. Can be mood based, but can literally hit in the midst of a TV show and all of a sudden I can't sleep until I've watched an entire season. I often times fall asleep on the couch or recliner and wake up at first light.
I'm driven by curiosity towards entertainment, wanting to see whatever piques my interest. I Binge on them. This past Spring while teaching 4 courses, running two labs, and sitting on two committees plus program meetings, I managed to watch the entire series of The Shield (7+ seasons), Justified (5 seasons), Game Of Thrones (3 seasons), Californication (3 seasons), How I Met Your Mother (8 seasons), Archer (4+ seasons), and I watched the BBC Sherlock seasons. That's in addition to almost every UA Basketball game, most Suns games, and random films, re-run TV, and starting multiple series and abandoning them.
I function well, but I wish I slept more.
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Re: The Sleeping Disorders Thread
Doesn't help. Prior to this a TV binge I book binged.Salty wrote:Read a book. That helps me too.
It's like if I start something I literally can't stop until I'm satisfied or my eyes pound in time with my heartbeats. Sometimes I swear I don't fall asleep so much as pass out from mental fatigue.
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Re: The Sleeping Disorders Thread
I just added this up. On the low side, it's about 23-25 hours a week, not counting sports, films or TV reruns of any kind.JMarkJohns wrote:Yes... Plus I've always been an active thinker at night, even in bed. Late night threads at the old site all those years ago didn't help. And now I have TiVo, Netflix, Amazon Prime, OnDemand, HBO, Sports 24/7.... Not to mention my own DVD collections.Longhorned wrote:That's what Seinfeld described as the impulse for entertainment as the only thing that sleep can't overcome. Sometimes I feel like I'm too tired to get myself ready for bed, and it 's easier just to keep watching Netflix.JMarkJohns wrote:It's very easy for me to not go to bed. I have to literally force myself to go to bed. I can easily veg out on TV, movies, etc until the 2/3/4 am marks. Can be mood based, but can literally hit in the midst of a TV show and all of a sudden I can't sleep until I've watched an entire season. I often times fall asleep on the couch or recliner and wake up at first light.
I'm driven by curiosity towards entertainment, wanting to see whatever piques my interest. I Binge on them. This past Spring while teaching 4 courses, running two labs, and sitting on two committees plus program meetings, I managed to watch the entire series of The Shield (7+ seasons), Justified (5 seasons), Game Of Thrones (3 seasons), Californication (3 seasons), How I Met Your Mother (8 seasons), Archer (4+ seasons), and I watched the BBC Sherlock seasons. That's in addition to almost every UA Basketball game, most Suns games, and random films, re-run TV, and starting multiple series and abandoning them.
I function well, but I wish I slept more.
Seems low, but I'd guess I could easily double that with sports, films, TV.
- Chicat
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Re: The Sleeping Disorders Thread
JMark, I have a simple cure for you...
Have a kid.
Have a kid.
Of the 12 coaches, Rush picked the one whose fans have the deepest passion, the longest memories, the greatest lung capacity and … did I mention deep passion?
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Re: The Sleeping Disorders Thread
I don't even have a dog because it's too much responsibility.Chicat wrote:JMark, I have a simple cure for you...
Have a kid.
- Alieberman
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Re: The Sleeping Disorders Thread
I used to sleep well.Chicat wrote:JMark, I have a simple cure for you...
Have a kid.
Then came the kids.
Then came anxiety / depression
Then came the dog that insists on going for a walk at 530am.
I am now always tired but I can never sleep for long periods of a time.
- ghostwhitehorse
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Re: The Sleeping Disorders Thread
How about this one?
- Merkin
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Re: The Sleeping Disorders Thread
Just wait until you all get older, sleeping through the night is really tough.
Ambien only helps you fall asleep, doesn't keep you asleep, which is great since it doesn't leave you groggy in the morning like Benedryl. They say Ambien is not addicting, but I sure need it.
But not in bed. Bed should only be for sleeping. And sex, and that's a good sleep aid too.
If you read in bed, your body gets confused on whether you want to sleep or read. So get a nice comfy chair near your bed for reading.
Ambien only helps you fall asleep, doesn't keep you asleep, which is great since it doesn't leave you groggy in the morning like Benedryl. They say Ambien is not addicting, but I sure need it.
Salty wrote:Read a book. That helps me too.
But not in bed. Bed should only be for sleeping. And sex, and that's a good sleep aid too.
If you read in bed, your body gets confused on whether you want to sleep or read. So get a nice comfy chair near your bed for reading.
- 77HoyaCat4Ever
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Re: The Sleeping Disorders Thread
That's part of my problem; I read until 2 am. Have to get up at 545 or 0600.Salty wrote:Read a book. That helps me too.
- Daryl Zero
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Re: The Sleeping Disorders Thread
Similar situation. I am more of a night person and so it is hard to wake early. However, I am someone who completely wakes up when I get up. I have never drank coffee and seldom have tea. I can get to sleep okay mostly but will wake during the night. Sometimes can't get back to sleep. By the time I have to get going, I really know that I could sleep if I had the opportunity. My brain sometimes will not turn off and thoughts just fly around in my head. OTOH, I have written songs in my dreams or come up with book ideas. Too bad I don't keep a journal because I forget them pretty quickly.Alieberman wrote:I used to sleep well.Chicat wrote:JMark, I have a simple cure for you...
Have a kid.
Then came the kids.
Then came anxiety / depression
Then came the dog that insists on going for a walk at 530am.
I am now always tired but I can never sleep for long periods of a time.
Erlich Bachmann: Richard wrote the code, yes, but the inspiration was clear. Let me ask you something. How fast do you think you could jack off every guy in this room? Cause I know how long it would take me. And I could prove it.
- Longhorned
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Re: The Sleeping Disorders Thread
Oh I wake up singing those songs. My wife sings them back to me until I can record them. They're horrible.
- PieceOfMeat
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Re: The Sleeping Disorders Thread
insomnia, circadian rhythm disorder, etc. etc.
oh and ...GWH...
oh and ...GWH...
what the hell is that?ghostwhitehorse wrote:How about this one?
It's long past time to bring this back to the court, let's do it with a small update:
- Longhorned
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Re: The Sleeping Disorders Thread
If you're over the age of 30, chances are you've got one of those living in your colon.
- PieceOfMeat
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Re: The Sleeping Disorders Thread
Just the one, right?Longhorned wrote:If you're over the age of 30, chances are you've got one of those living in your colon.
It's long past time to bring this back to the court, let's do it with a small update:
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Re: The Sleeping Disorders Thread
So, your eyes pop open in the middle of the night or way too early in the morning and you can't fall asleep again, bringing on the ills of an underslept day. This is working for me: Third-stage imagination dream re-entry.
First stage: Close your eyes and imagine a place, like a backyard with a grass lawn and a wooden fence in the morning sunlight, for example.
Second stage: Then you imagine yourself in that place with your eyes open while imagining something else, like landing an airplane, for example.
Third stage: While you imagine yourself in that place imagining landing an airplane, you enact the imagined act in the first-stage imaginary place. For example, holding a toy airplane and slowly bringing it downward to land on an imaginary runway on the imagined lawn. Land it multiple times in different ways. Now you're so deep in the subconscious that you segue seamlessly into the space of dreaming, and you're asleep.
First stage: Close your eyes and imagine a place, like a backyard with a grass lawn and a wooden fence in the morning sunlight, for example.
Second stage: Then you imagine yourself in that place with your eyes open while imagining something else, like landing an airplane, for example.
Third stage: While you imagine yourself in that place imagining landing an airplane, you enact the imagined act in the first-stage imaginary place. For example, holding a toy airplane and slowly bringing it downward to land on an imaginary runway on the imagined lawn. Land it multiple times in different ways. Now you're so deep in the subconscious that you segue seamlessly into the space of dreaming, and you're asleep.
- Chicat
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Re: The Sleeping Disorders Thread
Is that the moment when someone implants the subconscious suggestion that you should sell your Fortune 500 company?
Of the 12 coaches, Rush picked the one whose fans have the deepest passion, the longest memories, the greatest lung capacity and … did I mention deep passion?
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Re: The Sleeping Disorders Thread
Only if you forgot to destroy your old hotel room keys.Chicat wrote:Is that the moment when someone implants the subconscious suggestion that you should sell your Fortune 500 company?
- Alieberman
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Re: The Sleeping Disorders Thread
I only seem to sleep well if I have sex before bed.
I usually don't sleep well.
I usually don't sleep well.
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Re: The Sleeping Disorders Thread
Here's the problem as I see it. For some reason, my wife (and I suspect other wives) holds to this eternal belief that seduction is as required several years into marriage as it was at the start of the relationship. What this means is that the frequency of sex, and the good sleep that follows, is actually entirely in our control (and not just in our hands) if only we put forth thoughtfully creative and time-invested seductions with frequency, as in multiple times a week. The reason why we don't is because that's ridiculous.Alieberman wrote:I only seem to sleep well if I have sex before bed.
I usually don't sleep well.
Seduction is against our nature. Between the evening hours of 8:00 and 11:00, what we need is to slouch on the couch in a stained T-shirt while watching TV. We really, really need it. And then, without additional effort, we need to go straight to sex at 11:00, and then straight to sleep at 11:12. We really, really need it.
But we can't have those things in that order.
I would argue that it would be worse for us to give up the stained T-shirt time for the sake of seduction in order to have frequent sex. We'd be sexually satisfied and well-slept, but we'd go insane if we went to work every day and then came home to act like we're some kind of romantic, sensitive cognoscenti.
In fact, I think we wouldn't be able to turn it off and it would drive us over the edge. Women at work and in restaurants would start to find us almost unbearably attractive, but yet in an abstract, completely resistible kind of way -- like as a model for how the men that they actually want to sleep with (not us) should strive harder to be. The result would be alienation and unresolvable emptiness, an imprisonment of the endless cycle of seduction and monogamous sex. A French director would probably make a movie about us and our decision to lock ourselves in a walk-in refrigerator.
Re: The Sleeping Disorders Thread
I keep trying to read this, but I always fall asleep before I'm finished.Longhorned wrote:Here's the problem as I see it. For some reason, my wife (and I suspect other wives) holds to this eternal belief that seduction is as required several years into marriage as it was at the start of the relationship. What this means is that the frequency of sex, and the good sleep that follows, is actually entirely in our control (and not just in our hands) if only we put forth thoughtfully creative and time-invested seductions with frequency, as in multiple times a week. The reason why we don't is because that's ridiculous.Alieberman wrote:I only seem to sleep well if I have sex before bed.
I usually don't sleep well.
Seduction is against our nature. Between the evening hours of 8:00 and 11:00, what we need is to slouch on the couch in a stained T-shirt while watching TV. We really, really need it. And then, without additional effort, we need to go straight to sex at 11:00, and then straight to sleep at 11:12. We really, really need it.
But we can't have those things in that order.
I would argue that it would be worse for us to give up the stained T-shirt time for the sake of seduction in order to have frequent sex. We'd be sexually satisfied and well-slept, but we'd go insane if we went to work every day and then came home to act like we're some kind of romantic, sensitive cognoscenti.
In fact, I think we wouldn't be able to turn it off and it would drive us over the edge. Women at work and in restaurants would start to find us almost unbearably attractive, but yet in an abstract, completely resistible kind of way -- like as a model for how the men that they actually want to sleep with (not us) should strive harder to be. The result would be alienation and unresolvable emptiness, an imprisonment of the endless cycle of seduction and monogamous sex. A French director would probably make a movie about us and our decision to lock ourselves in a walk-in refrigerator.
I suspect I have apnea. Anyone use this?
I never sleep on my back, so ...
Right where I want to be.
Re: The Sleeping Disorders Thread
I haven't had back to back good nights sleep in over 6 months.
Re: The Sleeping Disorders Thread
I struggle. My issue is not being able to fall asleep without watching TV, which diverts my brain from deeper thoughts. Can fall asleep all right, but when I awake in the middle of the night, I have to watch more tube. Can't sleep in, regardless of how the night went.
Napping on the weekends is a breeze, and I've come to value those. One hour, and I'm good.
Napping on the weekends is a breeze, and I've come to value those. One hour, and I'm good.
Right where I want to be.
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Re: The Sleeping Disorders Thread
In my experience, that problem creates the long-term cycle. If I break the cycle, the problem doesn't come up again for a long time. I break the cycle by taking two Benedryls. The doctor says that's a fine drug abuse. Half an hour later I'm asleep through the whole night. I have to stick with the Benedryl for a few weeks, and then I quit and have no sleeping problems again for a long time. Then it happens again either because of stress, or because of a time zone change. Nothing but the Benedryl will break the ensuing cycle.gumby wrote:I struggle. My issue is not being able to fall asleep without watching TV, which diverts my brain from deeper thoughts. Can fall asleep all right, but when I awake in the middle of the night, I have to watch more tube. Can't sleep in, regardless of how the night went.
Napping on the weekends is a breeze, and I've come to value those. One hour, and I'm good.
Re: The Sleeping Disorders Thread
That's it. Little pink pills for me. Thanks.
Right where I want to be.
- Chicat
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Re: The Sleeping Disorders Thread
Bennies make me feel fuzzy in the morning. I just ask my doc for Ambien.
Of the 12 coaches, Rush picked the one whose fans have the deepest passion, the longest memories, the greatest lung capacity and … did I mention deep passion?
Re: The Sleeping Disorders Thread
The doctor prescribed Trazodone today. Anybody here have any experience with it?
Re: The Sleeping Disorders Thread
4:30PM--- a couple of volleyball games, a 45 minute gym workout, or a long walk. Bed at 10, 45 minutes of reading, ready for sleep or sex. Works.
Once in a while a problem, so take one Gabapentin at bedtime for a few nights. A very innocuous prescription med which works.
I find meditation really works well on the few times I have trouble getting to sleep. A streamlined process: Count backward from 20 to zero one number at a time, starting at 20 at normal volume---then reducing volume slightly with each number until 1 is a light whisper. A surefire method.
Also---another subject---the backward count at declining volume is also a practical approach for any day or night time point you wish to coax your brain activity from left to right to do creative work, especially visual arts. I do this before painting, drawing or (trying) to write creatively. It works. I have artist friends who also use this or other methods.
Once in a while a problem, so take one Gabapentin at bedtime for a few nights. A very innocuous prescription med which works.
I find meditation really works well on the few times I have trouble getting to sleep. A streamlined process: Count backward from 20 to zero one number at a time, starting at 20 at normal volume---then reducing volume slightly with each number until 1 is a light whisper. A surefire method.
Also---another subject---the backward count at declining volume is also a practical approach for any day or night time point you wish to coax your brain activity from left to right to do creative work, especially visual arts. I do this before painting, drawing or (trying) to write creatively. It works. I have artist friends who also use this or other methods.