Winter Woes: Why Fighting Sleep Might Help You Sleep Better

USATue Jan 28 2025
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Are you one of the many people who struggle to sleep during the cold winter months? If so, you're not alone. Six out of ten Americans report that their sleep routines are disrupted by the colder seasons. Expert doctors point to several factors like reduced sunlight, heavier meals, warmer rooms, less physical activity, and dry air as culprits that make falling and staying asleep more difficult. Surprisingly, trying to stay awake might actually help you sleep better. This is a technique known as "paradoxical intention, " which is used in cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia. The idea is that sleep should come naturally, and the harder you try to force it, the more difficult it becomes. Anxiety about not getting enough sleep can become a self-fulfilling prophecy. The more you worry about not being able to rest, the less likely you are to get any sleep. This worry is often referred to as "performance anxiety. " Paradoxical intention helps you overcome this by doing the exact opposite of what you're struggling with. Instead of trying to sleep, you try to stay awake.
In practice, this might involve getting out of bed and doing a boring but attention-requiring activity, like doing laundry or reorganizing books. These activities shift your focus away from the pressure to sleep, making it easier for you to naturally drift off. While this technique might sound counterintuitive, research backs it up. A study published in the Journal of Sleep Research found that using paradoxical intention significantly reduced sleep-related performance anxiety. Participants who tried this method ended up falling asleep faster. Along with paradoxical intention, experts recommend simple changes like using blackout curtains and reducing light in the bedroom to encourage better sleep. Even small amounts of light can affect your sleep patterns. Additionally, there's a method called "10-3-2-1-0" that can help. This involves not consuming caffeine 10 hours before bedtime, not having big meals or alcohol three hours before bed, relaxing your body and mind two hours before sleep, avoiding electronics in the last hour, and never hitting the snooze button.
https://localnews.ai/article/winter-woes-why-fighting-sleep-might-help-you-sleep-better-aaab5780

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