
Sometimes as busy professionals, our thoughts make it very difficult to fall asleep or get back to sleep after we wake up. Thoughts of what we should have done the day before, combined with our next day’s to-do list run through our minds all at once. Sometimes these thoughts trigger anxiety and oftentimes prolong our sleep onset.
No matter the thoughts going on in your mind that contribute to your sleeping difficulty, they don’t have to prevent you from the restful sleep you deserve.
Here are a few techniques I recommend you use to prevent your thoughts from keeping you up at night. Remember, while different thoughts may come, you can choose which thoughts to focus on. You can switch unhealthy thoughts that don’t serve you to healthy ones. Your thoughts DO NOT have to control you!
These techniques will take some practice, but you will gain mastery over your thoughts with time.
Replace your current thoughts with pleasant, calm, or relaxing thoughts. To do any of these, make sure you are comfortable, either laying down or sitting reclined.
If you have been in bed for a while, I suggest getting out of bed for these activities and finding a cozy spot on the floor, in a chair, or a different room.
RELATED: What Happens To Your Body When You Don’t Get Enough Sleep
There are several mindfulness apps and podcasts. I recommended deciding on one before bedtime. This way, you don’t spend time figuring out what works for you, as it could increase your frustration.
Also, if you will be using your phone to play this, make sure you put the night shift mode on to minimize how much light you are exposed to.
I have listed a few here to consider. Alternatively, you could use blue light-blocking glasses. If you wear glasses to read, there are alternatives that can be clipped on to your current reading glasses.
Here are some apps I recommend trying out that provide guided meditation:
Bible App (free): Listen to the audible bible
Podcasts
Youtube: Type in “meditations for sleep”
This way, you get them from lurking in the shadows and can identify what you want to do with them. Put a descriptive term to those thoughts. Some examples of names are:
Blaming
Catastrophizing
Labeling
Regret
Fortune telling
Overgeneralization
Judgment
Overplanning
It may be hard to reason these out while you are in a spiral of racing thoughts, but just calling them out and speaking them out loud will help.
Not sure where to start? Try saying this sentence: “ I will not engage in these thoughts as they don’t serve me and my sleep well.”
Check out this link for more information.
Keep a journal or piece of paper close to you and put down the thoughts you are thinking without any blame or judgment. This is only between you and the paper, so feel free to offload as much as possible.
It can range from what you are so excited about the next day, your grocery list, and feelings of sadness you may be experiencing. Getting it downloaded from your mind to paper frees you up for more positive and pleasant thoughts that help with sleep.
RELATED: 6 Ways To Get Better Sleep
This goal is to address any negative thoughts that could potentially be lurking and challenge them. See them as thought traps. Most of these thoughts are often unrealistic and deserve to be questioned.
For example,
Thought: “ if I don’t sleep well tonight, I will be a mess tomorrow.”
Challenge: What do you mean by mess? What evidence is available to support this? Yes, the day may be challenging, but you will get through and function just fine.
Even if you don’t have the energy to challenge these thoughts, writing them down and saying to yourself, “worry time is over,” is a great place to start.
If you do have anxiety and find that your mind racing is not only limited to bedtime, these techniques can also work; however, I recommend consulting with a mental health provider.
I would love to hear from you on which one of these strategies helps curb your mind racing at bedtime.
Are you ready to make sleep a priority, but need help figuring it out? Click here to schedule a one-on-one coaching session with me.

Dr. Funke Afolabi-Brown, MD is a speaker, an educator, a writer, and the founder of Restful Sleep MD where she helps busy professional women and their children prioritize sleep to not only achieve their optimal health but also thrive and live to their fullest potential. She does this through courses and programs focused on educating and empowering busy professional women to make sleep a priority as a critical pillar of their health.

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