chaoswolf: (Default)
chaoswolf ([personal profile] chaoswolf) wrote2006-07-27 03:13 pm

Posted using LJTalk...

: [Damn my insomnia] I hate being an insomniac. I really do. I can't seem to get to sleep much before 0200, and can't seem to wake up until late afternoon. Damn my insomnia. Probably because it's summer. That might be it. Too hot to sleep during the night. That's it, I'm sure. Fuck. Just....gah. [livejournal.com profile] flower_cat bitched at me for not getting shoes. Seems like she wants to now.

Something I read once

[identity profile] capplor.livejournal.com 2006-07-27 10:23 pm (UTC)(link)
in a rather infamous child-care book called "Solving your child's sleep problems". One of the case studies was a teenager who couldn't sleep at night. Rather than try to go to bed earlier, they had him stay up later, until he'd pushed his bedtime into the next evening (sort of like a rotating work shift). 4 days is enough to do that, though I don't know if that'll work around the other stuff you need to do.

[identity profile] roaringmouse.livejournal.com 2006-07-28 01:00 am (UTC)(link)
That works. Craig did that for awhile because Stanford Sleep Clinic suggested it. However, it can also cause problems. If her meds are causing this problem, this sleep therapy may not work.

[identity profile] christophine.livejournal.com 2006-07-28 08:42 am (UTC)(link)
It sounds like what you have is not actually insomnia but Delayed Sleep Phase Syndrome (http://www.sleepdisorderchannel.com/dsps/) (DSPS). This is a sleep disorder that I also have. One of the lovely things about it is that people assume that you're choosing not to sleep until sometime in the wee hours of the morning. I got into endless fights with my folks about my sleep habits until I found out I had DSPS.

Treatment (http://www.sleepdisorderchannel.com/dsps/treatment.shtml) is limited, and none of it is permanent. If the light box therapy mentioned is ever stopped, then you'll slowly drift back to the "natural" circadian rhythms of your body rather than the ones preferred by society. The going to sleep later can work as a temporary reset also - this is the one that I do myself. But it's not permanent. After time, you'll find that you're drifting back toward your current pattern, and you'll have to do chronotherapy again.

The best solutions are either using a lightbox or visor early in the morning every day, likely every morning for the rest of your life. Or what I finally settled on - taking classes that fit with my natural DSPS rhythms, and aiming for a job with flexibility in scheduling. Fortunately I'm an artist, and artists are expected to be eccentric and (often) set their own strange working hours.