Wednesday, July 23, 2008

Sleepless in Salt Lake

I have always suffered from insomnia. While yet a child, I was introduced to the ritual of tossing, turning, checking the alarm clock, calculating in my mind how few possible hours of sleep there were left in the night. Even in my elementary school pictures, you will note the dark circles under my eyes--one more curse of being fair skinned.

I can't imagine falling asleep easily. I know that there are people who do...or at least I hear of them. As a child, I would sneak a flashlight into my bedroom so that I could read to relieve the unique boredom that comes only when a house is still and everyone else slumbers. But often I would become engrossed in the book and continue to read until the early morning hours. Other times I would turn off the flashlight, try to go to sleep, only to turn it back on again 30 minutes later and start the "getting sleepy" process all over again.

The gentle lull of books stopped working for me a long time ago. After my divorce, I had to find something louder to drown out thoughts scurrying through my head. I started to watch tv late at night. I understand that is supposed to make for an even worse night's sleep...something about your eyes picking up the changing light in the room. Nevertheless, old movies and talk shows still worked better than nothing.

It is a terrible, helpless feeling to have your physical body so exhausted that getting up feels like an impossible effort, yet your mind is whirling, spinning, and refusing to shut down. Where is the rest for body and soul? And where is my unrelenting mind taking me? Sometimes reliving the past, sometimes worrying about the future, sometimes worrying about today. Other times the thoughts are on things eternal, things that are deep and poignant. Sometimes the thoughts are on the joys of my life: my faith, my children, my passions. Other times the thoughts are on the sorrows of my life: mistakes I made that hurt others, other's mistakes that hurt me. Reliving and relearning the lessons.

When I am feeling emotional (happy or sad), sleep is the first thing that is affected. Even sometimes after I have fallen asleep, I will awake at 2:00 a.m. or 3:00 a.m. and spend the rest of the night doing the familiar hours count. "If I fall asleep right now, I can still get 4 hours of sleep." "If I fall asleep right now, I can still get 3 1/2 hours of sleep." Panic sometimes fills me knowing all the time that tomorrow will be harder than it had to be....if only I could have slept.

I've read lately how lack of sleep can affect everything from our physical abilities to our emotional and mental abilities. One study said that everything is harder if you haven't had a good night's sleep. So, what would a well-rested Joey be like? Would I be more steady? Would challenges be less overwhelming? How different might my life have been if I had spent all of those lost hours in dreamland?

And the worst is how paralyzing and overtaking worries are in the dark hours. A problem can seem as enormous and frightening as a monster in the closet at 1:30 in the morning. And at 8:00 a.m. the solutions are clear and the previous night's monster appears as the gnat that it really is. Oh, well.

Tomorrow is an exceptionally early morning. I have to get up at 4:30 a.m. to drive Niel and his boys up to the University where they will be running a 10k. I am putting up flags throughout the neighborhood at 7:00 a.m. to celebrate Pioneer Day. It's almost 12:00 a.m. If I fall asleep right now, I can still get 4 1/2 hours of sleep....

4 comments:

Skybird said...

Wow Johanna... this revealed a lot to me about my dear friend, and brought even more compassion for you into my heart than I already have (can such a thing be possible?!) As you will probably see, it is 3:45am as I type this, but I've not had the types of sleep issues you write about for some time. Let's talk some more on the private line...

Skybird said...

I have felt your hopes,
I have shared your sorrows.
I have dreamt with you
about tomorrows that may come,
or days that have
slipped away.

I share today what I have learned,
understand it may have
changed with living
life's tumultous ride...
the highs and lows...

Knowing tomorrow is always
new and fresh and unwritten-
I share hope and joy
and a deep respect and love
for my soul sister!

Friends of eternal nature
find odd ways to do that!
BKB (7/24/2008)

gilian said...

hm. I hesitate to post after reading skybird's posts--what a great friend to you missy--but I must confess that I too have dealt with sleepless nights through the years. Not during the times whilst nursing a wee child, when I dropped off to sleep within 30 seconds of my head touching a horizontal surface. But definitely during the times of worry--money, relationships, too much stuff going on at once--and during these times, if I did happen to sleep, I would swirl through dreams that contained so much imagery they could only be thought of as chaos. Crazy mixed up chaos.

In the past months, I have been blessed, seriously blessed, with a new way to achieve sleep. At risk of horrifying your readers, I will disclose its name: trazodone. When I finally admitted to suffering from severe depression, my therapist convinced me that I needed to take something to get adequate sleep, because lack of sleep aggravates the depression and beats at the already fragile state of the mind. Trazodone is an old anti-depressant that is rarely used for depression anymore but is a wonderful way to relax your body so that you can help your mind relax and rest. I never thought I would be someone who would advocate long-term use of medications like trazodone, but my docs insist I can take it for the rest of my life, or at least until I've worked out the crap I need to work out, with no side effects. The only side effect of trazodone is sleepiness.

Sleeping soundly for 6-8 hours makes a huge difference in how things look in the daylight.

Theresa said...

My sweet sister Joey.
This is my first blog, after today I will consider myself no longer a virgin blogger, and to you I am thankful. I read every word of your "blog" and thought to myself... I AM ADOPTED! WE ARE NOT RELATED! WHO AM I? WHO IS MY REAL FATHER???
Why do I feel this way? Because I am just too darn shallow to be your biological sibling! I remember your flashlight and you just saying, Teri, I just want to read, I'm tired of talking. The only books I read were for a grade! I'm being honest. When my head hits the pillow I may ponder a second about whether tuna or turkey would be faster to make for my husbands lunch, but then it's goodnight sleep tight time for me.

I've always thought I looked like that guy that ran the drive through at Hubs? He gave extra chips once... It makes sense now.

I love you Joey, I'm just crazy about you, I hope you know that.
Love Teri a.k.a. Theresa in North Carolina