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question for older members here...
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kidclam
Mini Boss
Joined: Sat Jan 28, 2006 12:51 am Posts: 4250
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 Re: question for older members here...
I am also a insomniac but lately I found a few things that help. Some sound corny but it has worked for me... Avoid taking drugs that help you sleep as you will rely on it more than solving the real issues. I read a handful of insomniac books and here is what's helped, with a few that I thought up of which works. 1) Get some exercise after work but not before you sleep. I find having to move heavy items, packing, running around all day make me sleep better. When I stay home all day during the weekend for example, I don't move much and find I don't sleep as well. 2) Don't drink alcohol after dinner time or caffeine after 3pm. Avoid heavy foods with high sugar. 3) Take up meditation or have 1 hour of non interruption, where you just relax your mind 4) Write down stuff that is in your head that is making you anxious like stuff you still need doing, bad day at the office Focus on solutions rather than continuing to fight something that is after the fact, or in your mind only. 5) Make love  or just spend valuable focused time with someone you love. 6) Read a book, but only something that will make you feel relaxed. Avoid thrillers, things that make you anxious. 7) Tell your wife you want a facial, its not very manly, but its very meditative and relaxing.  If you can sleep in a room with ventilation and no noise (in Hong Kong this is hard to get) 9) Thank everything you have, your partner, family etc. and everyone you met today before you doze off. 10) I heard native indians drink lots of water to get a deeper sleep (I tried and sometimes its good). If you have to pee a lot then avoid liquids 1 hour before you go to bed. Hope this helps, let me know which ones work for you...
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| Mon Feb 22, 2010 10:10 am |
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Parka
S7 Royalty
Joined: Mon Dec 05, 2005 3:14 pm Posts: 3106 Location: Oop North, UK
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 Re: question for older members here...
evilrabbitry wrote: lol really? I've had success with finding deeper, more satisfying sleep with use of it myself, personally. It's also reportedly fairly effective treatment for mild forms of depression, but there are varied studies saying one thing or another completely different from one another, as with most natural remedies, solid information is difficult to find as it's not very profitable to support their effeciency. Yup, but its down to the reason you've given. No drug company can market it exclusively so theres no clincial trials trying to prove its effects, and when it is in a trial it would be used against a companies product, where unsurprisingly it looks to not do much....cynical? KaijuZoo wrote: When the occasional bout of sleeplessness does occur, one Benedryl capsule (generic over the counter sleep aid diphenhydramine) does well without waking up groggy. My personal care physician told me about that many years ago when I was recovering from back surgery and could not sleep. Much better than messing with prescription meds! Is that marketed for aiding sleep, over here its purely sold for hay-fever/allergy symptoms with the drowsiness as a side effect. I can't tell you how many times i've refused sales to parents who buy it purely to get their kids to sleep at night (after filling them up with fizzy drinks)...We have products that contain diphenhydramine but are purely marketed as sleep aids (Nytol), they can get pretty addictive though. I wouldn't necessarily say they were better than prescription meds. The problem is long-term prescribing and over use. The newere generations don't have much of a hangover effect. But you're not actually curing the cause of the insomnia.
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| Mon Feb 22, 2010 1:49 pm |
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bryce_r
Vintage
Joined: Wed Aug 15, 2007 10:57 am Posts: 7991 Location: SanJose
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 Re: question for older members here...
Quote: Is that marketed for aiding sleep, over here its purely sold for hay-fever/allergy symptoms with the drowsiness as a side effect. I can't tell you how many times i've refused sales to parents who buy it purely to get their kids to sleep at night (after filling them up with fizzy drinks)...We have products that contain diphenhydramine but are purely marketed as sleep aids (Nytol), they can get pretty addictive though.
It's not directly marketed for sleep but I know a lot of people who use it for it. You also would not believe how many parents give children's benydryl to "help" their kids sleep on airplanes or long rides. Our pediatrician is very against that and I don't blame him. A lot of times plane rides are a pain but the idea of drugging my toddler is just unthinkable.
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| Mon Feb 22, 2010 2:58 pm |
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toybotstudios
Die-Cast
Joined: Sat Jul 01, 2006 11:40 pm Posts: 8096
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 Re: question for older members here...
i've been drinking Nyquil lately and love that warm feeling as i drift off into sleepy land. zzzzzzzzzzzzzz slightly groggy in the morning but that's what that four cups of coffee are for. 
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| Mon Feb 22, 2010 4:17 pm |
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Dean
Prototype
Joined: Sun Feb 18, 2007 9:53 pm Posts: 6232 Location: 415
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 Re: question for older members here...
I occasionally suffer from insomnia, a lifelong problem that for some reason seems to be diminishing, not increasing as I age. I used to find that some chamomile tea with a few drops of tincture of kava, valerian, or melotonin would help me get to sleep very effectively. However, if you drink tea before going to bed, chances are you'll have to pee in the middle of the night, so "your mileage may vary." Also, some herbal sleep aids work well at first, but then cause the user to wake up suddenly a few hours after falling asleep.
I wonder if it's possible that you have a sleep apnea problem and don't know it? Do you ever wake up suddenly, gasping for breath? Even if not, some of what you describe are "classic" sleep apnea symptoms. This is something that can be tested for with a "sleep study" that your doctor can easily prescribe if they deem it to be a likely problem. Hope I'm not being alarmist but the bit about being tired during the day is a possible indicator.
Someone said something about pot and whiskey. While those are common things that people use to become un-wired, if you go to sleep frequently drunk or stoned or both, you're messing with your serotonin balance and sleep/dream cycles. May not be the biggest deal in the world, but part of getting enough sleep is getting enough quality sleep.
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| Mon Feb 22, 2010 4:44 pm |
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BobDuher
Addicted
Joined: Wed Jun 07, 2006 11:41 am Posts: 857
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 Re: question for older members here...
kidclam wrote: 5) Make love  or just spend valuable focused time with someone you love. ... Fist of Fury?
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| Mon Feb 22, 2010 4:56 pm |
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locomoto566
Super Deformed
Joined: Sun Jan 01, 2006 3:00 pm Posts: 5466 Location: right behind you
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 Re: question for older members here...
I'm 43 and sleep like a baby. I wake up crying every hour with piss and shit in my pants.
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| Mon Feb 22, 2010 4:57 pm |
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Kevlo9
Super Deformed
Joined: Sun Mar 02, 2008 1:52 pm Posts: 5005 Location: KFHC
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 Re: question for older members here...
I usually come home and drink a couple beers and I fall asleep like a baby. Coors Light seems to work best. 
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| Mon Feb 22, 2010 10:16 pm |
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Greasebat
Side Dealer
Joined: Mon Oct 22, 2007 6:48 pm Posts: 2415 Location: NE OHIO
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 Re: question for older members here...
locomoto566 wrote: I'm 43 and sleep like a baby. I wake up crying every hour with piss and shit in my pants. That made me LOL. I had to tell it to my wife...hilarious.
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| Mon Feb 22, 2010 11:45 pm |
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nefasth
S7 Royalty
Joined: Tue Jan 01, 2008 1:46 pm Posts: 3505 Location: Morgoth
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 Re: question for older members here...
I woke up around 3am this morning and could fall back to sleep so I decided to try counting kaijus instead of sheeps and it worked 
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| Wed Feb 24, 2010 6:19 am |
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MicromanZone
Addicted
Joined: Mon Jun 16, 2008 9:16 am Posts: 733
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 Re: question for older members here...
Kicking this thread up since I have a question connected to this as a 42 year toy geezer with some interesting sleep issues as of late.
So, from last August 2009 to the end of May 2010 I was working a real intense schedule. Most intense in years. June rolls around and folks break for vacation and I use the month to catch up on sleep. And boy did that help! Feel more rested, calmer, better, etc.
But lately I decided I want to adjust my sleep schedule back to normal. So I took the Melatonin route: One 3mg chewable pill 1 hour before I want to sleep.
Okay, so it worked right away with a day and my sleep got back to normal. But here is the weird thing: For about 3-4 days after I take the pill I feel a weird hazish-like "hangover." I won't say it made me depressed, because I wasn't exactly that way. A wee bit queasy but not in a nauseous way. But I definitely felt "off." Then that feeling went away.
So my thinking is it's summer, I'm going out, getting sunlight so I am getting normal/natural Melatonin that route. Could taking this pill while my body is in a normal cycle just push my Melatonin levels up to a point where I feel ill?
Also kind of related, I'm no heavy drinker by a long shot. But the one or two days a week I touch a glass or two of wine or beer, a day or so later I genuinely feel a wee bit depressed. WTF? I'm living the life of a monk here and I get this?
I'm chalking it all up to age and adjusting and being able to understand your body/feelings better but still. Can anyone else relate or have similar experiences?
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| Sun Jul 11, 2010 9:14 pm |
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computerhair415
Comment King
Joined: Tue Apr 27, 2010 5:53 am Posts: 1164 Location: Narnia
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 Re: question for older members here...
Iv have insomnia for 8 years now. I know how ya feel. I got to bed @ 12-3 and then 4-6 everyday. I work in a high stress job. To tell ya the truth. I use herbal medication (cannabis) and it helps really well. but I really think you have to got to the root of the problem. Find out whats on your mind? OPEN YOUR MIND!! 
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| Mon Jul 12, 2010 7:36 am |
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uh oh
Addicted
Joined: Tue Sep 09, 2008 11:33 am Posts: 533 Location: LA
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 Re: question for older members here...
Lixx wrote: Oh I have been on a elliptical bicycle kick for the last month and a half. I usually do that for 15-20 around dinner time, until I'm beyond sweaty and have burned at least 300 calories. I guess my diet does really fluctuate. Exercise at night will definitely keep you up. Move it to the morning and amp it up to see if that helps.
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| Tue Jul 13, 2010 10:28 am |
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Roger
Mini Boss
Joined: Fri Nov 25, 2005 10:41 pm Posts: 4909
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 Re: question for older members here...
Lixx, a lot of people here have weighed in with some good things to try, but this is the part of your original post that sticks with me: Lixx wrote: ...I'm so worried I'll wake up in the middle of the night. A couple of years ago I went through a really rough bout of insomnia. Bad breakup, stress at work, and other stuff was being dog-piled on my psyche and this "wobble" with my sleep pattern started to get out of control. The fact that my sleep time (the last refuge of any human being from the stresses of their daily life) was being affected was a hard thing to handle, and I got into the cycle that you're in: the last conscious thought on my mind when I got into bed was, "I hope I'll stay asleep." Of course, this becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy, because then in four hours or so you're awake again and you're agonizing over it because your worst fear came to pass. You were afraid the Insomnia Monster was going to get you and sure enough, it did. There's a name for this specific type of insomnia but I can't find it right now. Of course, it's worthwhile to practice good "sleep discipline" and do all of these things, many of which people in the thread have suggested but it's worth reiterating: - Establish a regular sleeping and waking time and stick to it. - Eat right and exercise, but don't eat or exercise too close to bedtime. - Cut out caffeine. If you can't do this completely, make sure you don't drink any past noon. - Don't nap. - Make sure your bed is in a comfortable, dark, quiet place and use it only for sleeping and fucking, not watching TV, reading, or playing video games. - Stop using the computer and TV a couple of hours before bed time, your brain gets fooled by the bright screen and thinks that it's daytime, screwing with your internal clock. You may want to look at your life and try identifying the problems that aren't your insomnia, because those are most likely the real issues beneath the surface that are affecting your sleep. Therapy, hypnosis, meditation, self help books, these are all worthwhile things to look into. Whatever works will get you to the point where you're not thinking about your problems (consciously or unconsciously) and you can just live. And part of living is sleeping. Nowadays I sleep like a rock for 7 to 9 hours, even when I break the rules listed above. I'd say part of it is the result of dealing with the issues in my waking life, but most of it was disabusing myself of this notion that "there's something wrong with me because I have a problem sleeping." Either I don't believe this any more or I simply forgot it. My guess is that you'll most likely end up in the same place sooner than you think. Just give it some time and patience. Sweet dreams...
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| Tue Jul 13, 2010 1:50 pm |
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Materialist Zen
Toy Prince
Joined: Sat Dec 20, 2008 9:02 am Posts: 181 Location: Pittsburgh
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 Re: question for older members here...
For sure, age is the only real adversary to be concerned with. We as a society are not conditioned to accept or understand aging, and it will always come as a shock.
As for sleeping, don't under estimate the power of a nap. So many of the solutions offered here strike me as fairly regimented, when the answer could mean breaking away from routine.
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| Tue Jul 13, 2010 4:36 pm |
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