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Why Can't You Get A Good Nights Sleep?

Topic: Anger ManagementBy Dr. Jeanette RaymondPublished Recently added

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Insomnia Jeopardizes Merdith's Job The future of Meredith’s business depended on one simple thing. Getting a good night’s sleep. If she wasn’t on the ball, she would lose the marketing contract for a prestigious corporate firm. There was no way Meredith was going to let that happen. She couldn’t afford to jeopardize her image as the whiz that put the ‘wow’ factor into her designs. Meredith's Creative Juices Stop Flowing Simple jobs that took fifteen minutes now seemed to take over two hours and slowed down the entire creative process. Colleagues withdrew as she became increasingly irritable and impatient. Meredith tried to compensate by putting in longer hours but that made matters worse. Her work load increased as mistakes piled up. She had to face the fact that her erratic sleep pattern was having a disastrous effect on her performance. Meredith Tries All Known Remedies Bad habits were the first under attack. No more caffeine after 5:00 p.m. No more eating or drinking four hours before bed time. No more watching television or working in bed. Meredith followed these sleep hygiene rules with meticulous precision. That made her feel in charge as she imagined herself on top of her game at work. Meredith Resorts To Prescription Medication But sleep didn’t come. Every minute that Meredith stayed awake seemed like an hour and each hour made her cry with frustration. It was so annoying that all her ‘good behavior’ went unrewarded. Self-help books, radio docs and alte ative medicine gurus recommended meditation, exercise, natural supplements, herbal teas, acupuncture and ‘giving up’ the desire to sleep! None of them did the trick. The only thing left were prescription meds. The thought of getting addicted and dealing with a bunch of unknown side effects was a lot scarier than dealing with sleep deprivation. Failure Looms Large Horror movies played out in Meredith’s imagination as she strove to get through those unbearably slow nights. The feature film title was failure. She won the Oscar for her masterful characterizations of losers and dummies, while Anxiety and fear won for best producer and director. Meredith Feels Ashamed. She Can't Face Work The big day arrived. The day she had to put together the final design proposal. Meredith couldn’t get out of bed. She was in a paralytic stupor, her heart was pounding and her hands and feet sweated. Her body refused to budge. No amount of urging herself to ‘get over it’ relieved the extreme anxiety that gripped her mind and body. Shamefully she called her partner with the news that she couldn’t make it to the meeting. Anxiety Is Her Real Illness Meredith was indeed sick. Her difficulty sleeping and staying asleep through the night was a red flag that something was wrong. The foundation supporting the A-plus performance had been collapsing for some time. Her emotional muscles had cramped and seized long ago but she bypassed their messages. The only voice she heard was “you have to do everything right, all the time, or else you are a failure.” Without muscles to operate the bones, her emotional skeleton fractured. She became irritable, tired, snappy and a pain to work with. Yet Meredith insisted on listening only to that rigid voice “ you must be better than everyone else, or you are just a waste of space.” She worked longer, harder and forced herself to try and sleep. Meredith Learns Not To Treat Herself as a Slave The inability to flip the switch to sleep mode made her furious. That’s why her eyes stayed open. It was the only weapon guaranteed to make her ‘see.’ It worked. She got the message that she couldn’t treat her mind and body as slaves to some ideal without killing them off. The accumulation of disrupted sleep, paralysis and anxiety attacks gave Meredith a large dose of exactly what she couldn’t tolerate in herself - frailty, weakness and lack of control. Her inflexible demands and unrealistic expectations came crashing down. A major reconfiguration was underway whether she liked it or not. She learned to accept her human limitations the hard way. How to Mangage the Anxiety and Sleep Like a Log Sleep problems are often due to anxiety. The anxiety comes from unreasonable expectations of your performance within relationships and at work. Worry about creating a bad impression or losing someone important become a vicious cycle of anxiety and fear. Your energies are diverted to deal with the anxiety leaving you bereft of your inspiration, intelligence, and inventiveness - and of course sleep. If you want to be a winner and get a good night’s sleep delineate your specific job and under your direct control, then execute it to the best of your ability. Taking on the appropriate load allows your body and mind to give you optimal performance. There is a hidden bonus. When your mind and body are in sync you radiate a confidence that increases the ‘wow’ response from your clients. Reduce anxiety by having secure healthy relationships at http://howtobuildhealthyrelationships.com Copyright, Jeanette Raymond, Ph.D.

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About the Author

Dr. Jeanette Raymond is a licensed psychologist in private practice in Los Angeles. She takes you from fear and frustration to fulfilling relationships. She helps you manage emotions so that you don't get stressed out, compromise your immune systems and get sick. She helps individuals, couples and families communicate their feelings in ways that makes them feel seen, heard and attended to. You can reach her at http://www.drjeanetteraymond.com

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