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Apr 02 2018

Anxiety and Sleep Disorders


It’s another sleepless night, already 4 am, and you have to get up in two hours. You have yet to sleep. Your mind will not shut off long enough to let sleep come. You keep thinking and thinking, worrying at times. This is insomnia and it’s one of the sleep issues that can arise from anxiety and anxiety-based disorders.

Anxiety and anxiety-based disorders, like generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) or post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), have a strong correlation with sleep disorders. It may be difficult to determine which came first, the anxiety or the sleep anxiety disorder.  What is known is that the two are linked together, causing more and more stress to those who suffer from just one or the other alone.

Causes of Sleep Anxiety Disorder:

For those who suffer from anxiety, are more likely to experience insomnia, the inability to sleep, or suffer from constant waking, not able to enter a deep sleep cycle necessary for good physical and mental health. Rapid-eye movement (REM) sleep is often prevented when anxiety is present, which can be responsible for depression, increased anxiety, hallucinations, difficulty in thinking, and increased risk of cardiac events. People who suffer from anxiety may also have difficulty getting to sleep, and have a longer sleep onset length, than people without anxiety disorders. For the average person, it takes 15 minutes to get to sleep, while someone with an anxiety disorder may take an hour. Sleep is vital to living things, and when a person fails to get that, they begin to break down.

Any anxiety disorder may bring on sleep problems, such as insomnia. It is the anxiety, the energy of fear or nervousness, that keeps the mind and body going. The fight/flight/or freeze response is activated, and the body is alert and ready to go, ready to act, as there is some threat somewhere, whether real or imagined, the body does not know, it just reacts to the threat the mind sees. Other mental illnesses can have anxiety associated with them, some types of depression have anxiety as a feature, or the fear and poor understanding of reality can come with thought disorders. No matter the cause, anxiety is a real feature and disrupts the life of the person who experiences it.

Sleep Anxiety Disorders are unfortunately too common with some estimating that 40 million people in the country suffer from them, with anxiety playing a significant role for many of them. This does not have to be and should be addressed immediately with your healthcare professional. With a combination of education, medication, and talk therapy to help calm the mind and re-evaluate stressful situations, a person can begin to find relief and get a stress-free night’s sleep again.

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Disclaimer:
The views and opinions expressed in this post and any associated articles are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions or policies of eTherapyPro. These posts and articles are shared for your enjoyment and consideration. Read them or not at your sole discretion and liability. They are not intended to replace counseling services rendered by licensed professionals. Consult with your counselor before implementing any content from these articles into your life.

Written by OldeTherapyPro · Categorized: Uncategorized · Tagged: anxiety and sleep, Anxiety and Sleep Disorders, anxiety and sleep problems, anxiety attack in sleep, anxiety in your sleep, anxiety no sleep, anxiety sleep problems, poor sleep and anxiety, sleep anxiety, Sleep Anxiety Disorder, sleep anxiety help, sleep anxiety symptoms, sleep anxiety treatment, sleep depression anxiety, sleep panic disorder, too anxious to sleep

Dec 27 2017

Gratitude Beats Depression and Increases Happiness

Gratitude Beats Depression

Gratitude is usually the last thing on our minds when depressed. It’s so much easier to focus on all the negativity that we’re feeling – in fact, that happens much more automatically. Considering the things we are grateful for is something that deserves more attention than just on Thanksgiving. Research indicates that showing gratitude throughout the year can have amazing benefits for anyone, and it can help bring us out of depression.

Gratitude increases happiness while decreasing depression, reduces stress, and improves self-esteem. That’s huge! It’s such a small thing that can go a long way towards helping you feel better and the best thing is you can do it without spending any money, or even leaving the house. The easiest way to get started is to keep a gratitude journal. Here’s how:

Instructions: At least two times a week, write a detailed journal entry about something you are grateful for. It could be about a person, a great meal, or anything that comes to mind. Be prepared to spend about 10 – 20 minutes on each journal entry.

Gratitude Journal Depression Tips and Hints

  • Don’t rush. Take your time to think about what you are truly grateful for. Expect to spend 10-20 minutes on each entry, including think time.
  • Writing about people you are grateful for tends to be more powerful than writing about things. But go ahead and write about those things anyway, especially if they are all you can think of at first.
  • Use detail to explain why you’re grateful. For example, if you are grateful for a friend, describe what they do that is nice and why that makes you grateful.
  • Try to write at least twice a week. Keep your journal where you can see it and plan when you will write. Set an alarm on  your phone or calendar if you think you might forget.
  • Make your gratitude journal a priority. If you treat it as just another chore to be completed and tossed to the side, it won’t do much good. Genuinely spend time thinking about your life, and experiencing gratitude.

Journal Prompts

These journaling prompts are optional. Feel free to write about anything you are grateful for, but if you get stuck, you can try one of these.

The best part about today…                         A fun experience I had…
A reason to be excited for the future…      Someone I can always rely on….
Someone whose company I enjoy… A valuable lesson I learned…
Something I can be proud of… Something beautiful I saw…
Someone who I admire… An experience I feel lucky to have had…
A good meal I enjoyed… An act of kindness I witnessed or received…

 

Incorporating gratitude into your life can do more than just help with depression. Science has helped to prove that showing appreciation can help you win more friends and opens the door to new opportunities. And get this – gratitude can actually help you feel physically better. It helps people sleep better (and who couldn’t use a better night’s sleep?), and can enhance empathy while reducing aggression. And not only does showing gratitude reduce stress, but research studies have found that it can help in overcoming trauma and it lowers rates of PTSD. To learn more about these other benefits of gratitude, check out this article from Forbes.

Start a trial of Free online counseling and learn how to incorporate gratitude into your life today.

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Disclaimer:
The views and opinions expressed in this post and any associated articles are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect opinions or policies of eTherapyPro. These posts and articles are shared for your enjoyment and consideration. Read them or not at your sole discretion and liability. They are not intended to replace counseling services rendered by licensed professionals. Consult with your counselor before implementing any content from these articles into your life.

Written by Anais Villanueva · Categorized: Uncategorized · Tagged: depression gratitude, Gratitude, gratitude and depression, Gratitude Beats Depression, gratitude depression, gratitude for depression, gratitude journal depression, gratitude journal for depression

Jun 06 2017

The Science Behind Sunlight and Sleep: How Light Influences Your Rest

sunlight and sleep

According to a recent study, individuals who are exposed to sunlight or bright indoor light early in the morning experience less stress, feel less depressed, and sleep better at night than those who are not. Exposure to sunlight during the day and less light at night supports the body’s healthy sleep patterns by appropriately calibrating the body’s circadian clock, the biological system that helps regulate sleep.

The study published in “Sleep Health: Journal of the National Sleep Foundation” found that people who were exposed to bright light between 8:00 am and noon fell asleep more quickly at night and experienced fewer sleep disturbances than those not exposed to bright light early in the day. Additionally, office workers who were exposed to bright light between 8:00 am and 5:00 pm reported lower levels of depression than individuals not exposed to bright light all day.

Although exposure to bright, natural sunlight is best, even office workers benefit from exposure to short-wave “blue” light. In recent years, many businesses have reduced lighting to be more energy efficient, but this trend may be changing as many offices are moving towards brighter lighting because happier, well-rested employees are more productive employees.

For years, we have known that sleep quality affects several mental, emotional, and physical problems, including mood disturbance and difficulty with metabolism and the immune system. One way to improve our quality of sleep is to pay attention to how much light exposure we receive especially early in the day. More light in the morning equals better sleep at night.

If you are struggling to find quality sleep because of anxiety, depression, or other emotional difficulties, you may also want to consider talking to a therapist online.

Start a Free trial of online counseling and talk to a counselor today.

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Disclaimer:
The views and opinions expressed in this post and any associated articles are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions or policies of eTherapyPro. These posts and articles are shared for your enjoyment and consideration. Read them or not at your sole discretion and liability. They are not intended to replace counseling services rendered by licensed professionals. Consult with your counselor before implementing any content from these articles into your life.

Written by Ares Minks · Categorized: Uncategorized · Tagged: anxiety and sleep, Anxiety and Sleep Disorders, anxiety and sleep problems, anxiety attack in sleep, anxiety in your sleep, anxiety no sleep, anxiety sleep problems, poor sleep and anxiety, sleep anxiety, Sleep Anxiety Disorder, sleep anxiety help, sleep anxiety symptoms, sleep anxiety treatment, sleep depression anxiety, sleep panic disorder, too anxious to sleep

May 15 2017

There Is No Permanent “You,” Say Both Science and Buddhism

Science and Buddhism

Both Buddhism and contemporary neuroscience agree: that there is no permanent “you” or consistent, objective self.  The Western idea that we remain the same moment to moment is an illusion.  Rather, we are a set of cells, with the brain and body in constant flux.

What Does Buddhism Teach?

Traditionally, Buddhism has taught “anatta,” the concept that there is no enduring soul, no consistent self.  Just as suffering is an illusion, so is the concept of the self.  The things that we believe define ourselves change over time, as does our sense of self.  Eventually, we may come to understand that not only does the “self” change but that it does not matter in the end.

What Does Science Demonstrate?

Current advances in neuroscience seem to endorse the Buddhist teaching of “anatta.” Research demonstrates the neuroplasticity of the brain, that is, the reality that the physiological structure of the brain can be changed simply through changing our thought patterns.  Specifically, Buddhist-style meditation can change the structure of the brain.  This means that our brains, in which we house our sense of self, are not permanent but change over time and can be intentionally changed over time.

Why Does it Matter from a Therapeutic Standpoint?

The understanding that our sense of self is impermanent has many positive ramifications from a therapeutic standpoint.  This means that the internal struggles we have today need not define us. It may feel like they do and that they always will. But science has demonstrated that our thought patterns are, much like our bodies, changing over time.  We can train our brains in such a way that the thoughts that plague us today need to continue to be an issue in the future.  We can grow and evolve in positive ways!

Many people say they are struggling to discover who they are. If “you” are constantly changing there may be no discovery to make. Perhaps it’s best to accept the circumstances of the moment you are in so you can use them to create “you” in the moment to come.

Talk About “You” With a Counselor Today.

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Written by Ares Minks · Categorized: Uncategorized

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