This Magical Tip From Sleep Doctors Will Help You Stop Tossing and Turning

When your mind refuses to calm down, here's what sleep experts recommend to help you get to sleep faster

You know the feeling: Youโ€™ve been tossing and turning, and you know for a fact youโ€™re nowhere near falling asleep. So now youโ€™re stressed about the fact that unless you nod off in exactly eight minutes youโ€™ll be under your recommended minimum of seven hours and be exhausted all day and wonโ€™t be able to focus, which means youโ€™ll be groggy during your meeting with your boss, so maybe you should sleep in, but then youโ€™d have to skip your morning walk, even though you were just getting back in the habit of getting more active.

Your mind is racing faster than ever, and you canโ€™t find the brakes. The best way to let go of all that anxiety? Simple: Pick up a book.

โ€œOccupying the mind with something other than the business of the day or the stress or the concern of not sleeping is the easiest way to get back to sleep faster,โ€ says Janet Kennedy, PhD, clinical psychologist and founder of NYC Sleep Doctor. Bonus: Leave your room to read. You want your brain to associate lying in your bed with sleeping or sexโ€”not reading, watching TV, or doing other tasks.

Here’s why it works

Turning on a light so that you can take the time to get into a passage of fiction sounds like it would wake you up even more and cause insomnia, but Kennedy says it actually does the opposite. โ€œTossing and turning creates tension that creates adrenaline,โ€ she says. โ€œIf you distract the mind with something very interesting but not too activatingโ€”if you engage in reading a storyโ€”your mind is diverted away from the stress.โ€

Just make sure to use a book light rather than the usual lamp on your bedside table, says Michael Breus, PhD, clinical sleep specialist and author of The Power of When. The light wavelengths from a regular lamp signal the brain not to produce melatonin, a hormone that helps lull you to sleep, he says.

Picking up a book is a better alternative to TV, which gives off another type of light that could make you more alert. Plus, reading requires just enough brainpower to mellow your thoughts without looping back to your worries. โ€œItโ€™s easy to watch TV and zone out, and your mind goes back to the stressful stuff,โ€ Dr. Kennedy says. โ€œWith reading, you really get your mind involved and have to work a bit. You have to imagine the characters and keep track of the plot.โ€

A consistent routine also helps

For those prone to tossing and turning, start a routine that will calm your mind way before youโ€™re even thinking about crawling into bed. Find a quiet place to write in a worry journal, Dr. Breus says. On the left, list all your problems: everything you did today and want to do tomorrow. Now on the right side, name a solution for each one. It could be a call you need to make, or even the conscious decision to put off thinking about it until later in the week. โ€œWriting down the solution to the problem lowers anxiety levels surrounding what the issue would be,โ€ Dr. Breus says. Consider trying some of these bedtime routines for sound sleep.

The key is to do your journaling three or four hours before lights out time. โ€œDonโ€™t do it right before bed, because then youโ€™ll just keep thinking about solutions,โ€ Dr. Breus says. Make an agreement with your partner that youโ€™ll be taking 20 or 30 minutes to yourself right before dinner every night, or do your writing while waiting in the carpool line for your kid. Youโ€™ll be worry-free into the evening and all the way through bedtime.

Sources
Medically reviewed by Renata Chalfin, MD, on March 30, 2020

Marissa Laliberte
Marissa Laliberte-Simonian is a London-based associate editor with the global promotions team at WebMDโ€™s Medscape.com and was previously a staff writer for Reader's Digest. Her work has also appeared in Business Insider, Parents magazine, CreakyJoints, and the Baltimore Sun. You can find her on Instagram @marissasimonian.