All content found on the Put Insomnia to Bed RUclips channel is provided for informational and educational purposes only. It is not medical advice and is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease, disorder, or medical condition. It should never replace advice given to you by your physician, prescriber, or any other licensed healthcare provider. Dr. Steve Orma provides consulting services only and does not provide medical advice or medical treatment. All content is provided “as is” and without warranties, either express or implied.
completely agreed with you, my girlfriend at 60 only sleep 4 hours a day for last 30 years and she is healthy as horse, never sick and look like 45.. I'm 71 have been suffered insomnia & anxiety for last 2 years, just recently realized having insomnia it's not a dead sentence, after got CBT-I Treatment and continue to listen to the insomnia podcast like this one have helped and overcome my fear of not sleeping well overnight. Thank you so much for sharing all your valuable knowledge !
You are totally right . What changed my life was buying a grounding sheet. It's made a whole difference. I even have the odd dream now after years of sleeping tablets. Thankyou
Usually, the quantity is the first thing to improve when you do CBT-I, and then once your sleep cycle smooths out and gets more consistent, the quality of the sleep improves.
Yes, I've had many women in my program who are perimenopausal/menopausal and they can get past insomnia. Many women who have hormone shifts don't have insomnia. That means the hormone shifts can interfere with sleep, but don't necessarily CAUSE insomnia, because it's more about how you REACT to the poor sleep. This is good news because it means it's within your power to manage those shifts with your sleep. I'm planning to do a Q&A video next week, so I'll address this question in more detail there.
This helped, except the last one. I will always have insomnia and I am OK with it. If I get 4-5 hours of, I am able to all day without being tired or sleepy. I am 81 and take no meds of any kind.
Hi, I can't describe the entire process in a video, but you can learn a lot more about the process in this playlist I've created about the treatment (cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia or CBT-I) ruclips.net/p/PLRSHWGAOodVqi5n8OW9F1khJDgyfL-aXj&si=mY3VZkQ5XSzH6E0s
I have insomnia. I get 3-4 hours a night sleeping if I’m lucky. I keep changing my prescriptions as they do not help after a short period. I’m looking into CBTI but not sure it’s going to help
I was a person who suffered from insomnia for decades, in fact since childhood. It wasn't solved by CBT though, but by keeping a food diary and finding the correlations with my intake. I've been on an organic whole foods plant based pescetarian diet (no dairy, but I do eat egg yolks; fatty fish once or twice a week) for most of my adult life. What caused my insomnia/wiredness and restless legs: 1) all and any fluid calories (soups, juices, plant milks) 2) fructose - including in fruits, especially dried fruits - and concentrated sugars (maple syrup - i can add one coffee spoon to my vinaigrette). I am able to eat one or two servings of fresh fruit/and two or three dried apricots a day, max. 3) chocolate, green tea, caffeinated coffee. I can drink two black teas and one decaf in the early morning, without problem. Chocolate sadly, I have to abstain from (in a former life I was a chocoholic, eating one or two squares of pure chocolate daily) 4) any spice foods - sadly. I cán eat green herbs without problem. I actually found out how effective this was, after my dearest husband (of almost four decades) died unexpectedly, and I couldn't eat for many weeks after, undeliberatly enforcing an elimination diet, only eating some rice, green veggies, egg yolk/fish in the first month. Despite the shock and unimaginable grief I, for the first time in decades, COULD SLEEP. Whenever I added any of the above, though (and I did so only sparingly, because for many months after, eating remained a problem) it would ruin my night. I now mostly adhere to this regimen, only very occasionally caving, which never really worth it. But I am a sucker for summer fruits like peaches and nectarines, and I love Indian food. However, what I can eat freely is great and delicious food also, and nothing tastes as good as a good night's rest feels.
If you have insomnia every day year after year, you start losing touch with reality, palpitations, mental illness then disability and major depression. Now have copd, fibrosis, abdominal issues just to name a few
All content found on the Put Insomnia to Bed RUclips channel is provided for informational and educational purposes only. It is not medical advice and is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease, disorder, or medical condition. It should never replace advice given to you by your physician, prescriber, or any other licensed healthcare provider. Dr. Steve Orma provides consulting services only and does not provide medical advice or medical treatment. All content is provided “as is” and without warranties, either express or implied.
How to do the method mentioned in video
completely agreed with you, my girlfriend at 60 only sleep 4 hours a day for last 30 years and she is healthy as horse, never sick and look like 45.. I'm 71 have been suffered insomnia & anxiety for last 2 years, just recently realized having insomnia it's not a dead sentence, after got CBT-I Treatment and continue to listen to the insomnia podcast like this one have helped and overcome my fear of not sleeping well overnight. Thank you so much for sharing all your valuable knowledge !
You're welcome! Thanks for sharing.
You are totally right . What changed my life was buying a grounding sheet. It's made a whole difference. I even have the odd dream now after years of sleeping tablets. Thankyou
Currently being treated with CBT-I therapy but am happy I stumbled onto this channel today and getting extra reassurance! Many thanks!
You're welcome, and glad you found CBT-I.
Thank u so much for your information, its really helpful but Is the quantity or the quality of your sleep easier to fix?
Usually, the quantity is the first thing to improve when you do CBT-I, and then once your sleep cycle smooths out and gets more consistent, the quality of the sleep improves.
Thank you, I was so scared, it was causing me not to sleep even more.
You're welcome!
Do you address hormonal shifts like perimenopause/menopausal that trigger insomnia?
Yes, I've had many women in my program who are perimenopausal/menopausal and they can get past insomnia. Many women who have hormone shifts don't have insomnia. That means the hormone shifts can interfere with sleep, but don't necessarily CAUSE insomnia, because it's more about how you REACT to the poor sleep. This is good news because it means it's within your power to manage those shifts with your sleep. I'm planning to do a Q&A video next week, so I'll address this question in more detail there.
This helped, except the last one. I will always have insomnia and I am OK with it. If I get 4-5 hours of, I am able to all day without being tired or sleepy. I am 81 and take no meds of any kind.
How to do the method mentioned in the video for chronic insomnia
Hi, I can't describe the entire process in a video, but you can learn a lot more about the process in this playlist I've created about the treatment (cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia or CBT-I) ruclips.net/p/PLRSHWGAOodVqi5n8OW9F1khJDgyfL-aXj&si=mY3VZkQ5XSzH6E0s
@@PutInsomniaToBed Thank you
Are there special milk that can really help insomnia...eg..Dreamy Sure or any kind of milk will do?
I have insomnia. I get 3-4 hours a night sleeping if I’m lucky. I keep changing my prescriptions as they do not help after a short period. I’m looking into CBTI but not sure it’s going to help
You won't know until you try :) And it is the best solution that exists for insomnia.
I was a person who suffered from insomnia for decades, in fact since childhood. It wasn't solved by CBT though, but by keeping a food diary and finding the correlations with my intake. I've been on an organic whole foods plant based pescetarian diet (no dairy, but I do eat egg yolks; fatty fish once or twice a week) for most of my adult life.
What caused my insomnia/wiredness and restless legs: 1) all and any fluid calories (soups, juices, plant milks) 2) fructose - including in fruits, especially dried fruits - and concentrated sugars (maple syrup - i can add one coffee spoon to my vinaigrette). I am able to eat one or two servings of fresh fruit/and two or three dried apricots a day, max. 3) chocolate, green tea, caffeinated coffee. I can drink two black teas and one decaf in the early morning, without problem. Chocolate sadly, I have to abstain from (in a former life I was a chocoholic, eating one or two squares of pure chocolate daily) 4) any spice foods - sadly. I cán eat green herbs without problem.
I actually found out how effective this was, after my dearest husband (of almost four decades) died unexpectedly, and I couldn't eat for many weeks after, undeliberatly enforcing an elimination diet, only eating some rice, green veggies, egg yolk/fish in the first month. Despite the shock and unimaginable grief I, for the first time in decades, COULD SLEEP. Whenever I added any of the above, though (and I did so only sparingly, because for many months after, eating remained a problem) it would ruin my night. I now mostly adhere to this regimen, only very occasionally caving, which never really worth it. But I am a sucker for summer fruits like peaches and nectarines, and I love Indian food. However, what I can eat freely is great and delicious food also, and nothing tastes as good as a good night's rest feels.
If you have insomnia every day year after year, you start losing touch with reality, palpitations, mental illness then disability and major depression. Now have copd, fibrosis, abdominal issues just to name a few
Ironic since its 3:36 am now