by Charlotte Jane Grimaldi Phillips Dip.Hyp NLP Pract. HPD
Having a good night’s sleep helps your body to relax all the muscles, reduces stress, tissues grow and repair. While you sleep your blood pressure and body pressure drops, energy is restored, and hormones released. It improves concentration levels, memory, health and productivity. Having a good sleep puts you in a better mood when you wake up. During our sleep we repair, rebuild, and recover to make peak performance a possibility. Optimising your sleep can unlock hidden potential and a better performance.
How Much Sleep Do We Need?
On average, UK adults get 6 hours and 12 minutes of sleep a night
Less than the NHS recommended 7-9 hours.
What happens when we don’t get a good night’s sleep?
Lack of sleep makes you lose more muscle than fat which can be why if you’re dieting to be careful. Being tired makes you feel hungry and crave sugary, starchy, and salty foods. When sleep gets short, the waistline expands. Stress can play a part as lack of sleep raises your cortisol levels which leads to fat storage around the abdomen. Not enough regular, restful sleep reduces the melatonin which is needed to reduce the cortisol for reducing stress. Not enough melatonin can increase your cortisol and stress. Regular lack of sleep can lead to insomnia, overthinking, and other health problems like diabetes and dementia, etc. have been linked due to the slow flow of blood to the brain. Women can have a 40% higher chance of insomnia and are more than twice as likely to receive a diagnosis of restless legs syndrome.
A Good Night’s Sleep Tube Map
Each tube line represents a different aspect of how you can achieve a good night’s sleep, with key points as stations on the respective lines. This should help you easily visualise and remember the steps to improve your sleep quality.
Get a routine in place.
When we are children, our parents would have set a bedtime routine for us. As adults we do what we like because we can. But the routine worked, and we had good restful sleep as a child and lots of energy in the daytime. There would be healthy meals at a set dinner time, maybe a card or board game or a relaxing tv programme, then a soothing bath, a story and bed. I’d use colours going through the body as a relaxing thing with words like loved, safe, and secure, and tired as a sweet dream with my boys.
- Think about adding a routine for bedtime without eating late, news, social media, TV or phones in the bedroom.
Do write in your journal any worries to get them out of your mind.
Write what 3 best things happened that day or made you smile or what you are thankful for.
Avoid caffeine, fast food, sugary foods, and alcohol a few hours before bed.
Dim the lights in your house an hour before bed to help your brain start getting ready for sleep. - When you go to bed and if you’re struggling to sleep, yawn as this releases the sleep hormones and makes you sleepy.
- Picture the thoughts that might be keeping you awake on a wall or dark curtain and visualise rubbing them away, fading and disappearing into the fabric or wall. Do this for each thought that’s keeping you awake.
- For doing self-hypnosis, sit in a chair with your feet on the floor, your crown facing the ceiling and your eyes raised to allow them to flutter. The eye fluttering is adopting the hypnotic mindset as you focus on a spot on the ceiling or wall and close your eyes. Focus on your breathing in and out to the count of four. In for four, hold for four, breath out for four, hold for a count of four and breath in for four, and again. Now imagine you are going gently down some steps. Picture your legs and feet as you go down the steps. Each step is taking you deeper into relaxation and sleep, focusing on the steps and you going down and down to peaceful sleep.
- Recall a good night’s sleep. Maybe recently, or when you were a child or how you’ve seen a baby sleep. As recall this good night’s sleep, notice how relaxed, rested and calm you feel.
Hypnosis suggestions
Each night when you go to bed, you’ll be at ease and relaxed, you’ll feel relaxed and calm knowing that every day is another adventure.
Starting now, as you go to bed every night, you’ll be calm, and at ease, your mind and your body will be calm, tranquil and relaxed. You’ll be able to sleep calmly, at peace, able to sleep the way you did when you were a baby – so calm, so relaxed, so completely at peace. You’ll sleep so well. You’ll be able to sleep soundly, knowing in the back of your mind, that day by day you’re beginning to live more fully, more deeply. As time goes on, you will live with more and more confidence and relaxation, and you’ll let yourself sleep the way a baby does, when a baby feels good and very secure. You’ll sleep very well, and very calm, and when you wake up in the morning, you’ll be fully rested, very refreshed and at peace.
And each day, as you wake up in the morning, you’ll have an inner feeling of excitement, a feeling of energy and underlying joy, eager to get up from bed and to get going. You feel so good, refreshed, awake, relaxed, with energy, an inner feeling of joy, and well-being, when you wake up in the morning. And throughout the day, a feeling of joy of living, of vibrant energy.
As you wake up in the morning, you’ll feel refreshed, strong and healthy, as you’ll have slept calmly and at peace, knowing that each day as life goes on, you will enjoy a good night’s sleep more and more. You’ll be at ease with your life and everything around you.
What to do to get a good night’s sleep?
- Laughing – watching or reading something funny in the evening helps release endorphins to help relax.
- Dim the lights in your house an hour before bed to help your brain start getting ready for sleep.
- Do write in your journal any worries to get them out of your mind.
- Avoid caffeine, fast food, sugary foods, and alcohol a few hours before bed.
- It is good to go to bed when you are sleepy. It is the retraining your brain to associate with the sleep response and sleep reduction.
- When you go to bed and if you’re struggling to sleep, yawn as this releases the sleep hormones and makes you sleepy.
- If you find yourself lying in bed wide away not going to sleep, after a while get up and go to another room, read or get fresh air, stretch out and go back when you are tired.
- Look at any root cause to what the sleep deprivation could be, like noises, stress, worries, heart burn, pain, etc.
What change will you put into place to get a good night’s sleep?
Would you like to take part in my FREE sleep hypnosis study? Which would involve a questionnaire, then practising hypnosis for 3 weeks. There will be another group without the hypnosis if you’d prefer. Email Charlotte@whatisyourstoryhypnotherapy.co.uk ☺
Hypnotherapy can help you:
- Relax your body and mind: Hypnosis promotes deep relaxation, allowing your body to release tension and prepare for sleep.
- Change negative thought patterns: We can help you to reprogram your thoughts to replace any negative thoughts about sleep with positive, calming affirmations.
- Improve sleep hygiene: Hypnotherapy can reinforce healthy sleep habits, such as establishing a regular bedtime routine.
- Identify and address underlying issues: Sometimes insomnia is a symptom of an underlying problem, such as stress or anxiety. Hypnotherapy can help you uncover and address these issues.
Hypnotherapy can help people achieve a good night’s sleep. Through suggestion to the part of the brain that creates habits. Your mind isn’t interrupted with the thoughts that distract or worry you. You learn that you are in control of your thoughts. You can create what it feels like to experience a good night’s sleep.
Do you say, “I’m a bad sleeper” or “I never have a good night’s sleep”? Think about what you are saying as this won’t be true for every night of your sleep in your life. We tend to make things sound worse than they are when we are tired. Try to rephase to ‘I usually sleep well’ ‘I enjoy my sleep.’
What change will you put into place to get a good night’s sleep? Contact Charlotte to help you achieve a good night’s sleep charlotte@whatisyourstoryhypntherapy.co.uk
Research
Hypnosis Intervention Effects on Sleep Outcomes: A Systematic Review1:
- This review investigated the effects of hypnosis interventions on sleep outcomes.
- Overall, 58.3% of the included studies reported hypnosis benefits for sleep, with 12.5% showing mixed results and 29.2% reporting no benefit.
Small Studies on Hypnotherapy2:
- Some small studies have identified modest sleep benefits from hypnotherapy.
- For example, the suggestion to “sleep deeper” during hypnosis increased slow-wave sleep, crucial for physical and mental recovery.
- Hypnotherapy may also reduce symptoms of anxiety and depression, which are often linked to sleep problems.
Research on Sleep Hypnotherapy3:
- A 2014 study found that hypnosis increased slow-wave sleep (deep, healing sleep) by up to 80% in some individuals.
- This suggests that hypnosis can be an effective treatment for insomnia.
Treatment of Children’s Insomnia with Hypnosis | Psychology Today1
- The research shows that hypnosis helped children and adolescents get to sleep sooner 90% of the time.
- Imagery can help overcome nighttime fears.