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How to Make It Through the Night



Many who are grieving find sleeping difficult. Over time, lack of sleep or fitful sleeping can take a toll on physical well-being.

Author Marta Felber knows from personal experience that nights can be long and sleepless following the death of a loved one. Here Marta shares what she did to sleep better and stay healthy after her husband’s death.

How do you cope with grief and insomnia? Below, share your ideas for making it through the night.




How to Make It Through the Night
It Seems Endless
By Marta Felber


I can pretend during the daytime that Joe is away, working outside or in his workshop. Alone for the evening meal and crawling into an empty bed confirm the worst! The loneliness for him descends like a shroud and there is no escape. What do I do to get to sleep easier? And what about those long hours in the middle of the night when I wake and can’t get back to sleep?

Ideas for Getting to Sleep and Surviving the Long Nights


STICK TO A REGULAR SCHEDULE. Have dinner with the TV news commentator. Have a set time to go to bed, a radio alarm to wake me at the same time every morning. Get up, regardless of how little sleep I have had. Maybe take an early afternoon nap, not longer than 30 minutes; set the timer.

GET REGULAR EXERCISE EVERYDAY, but not within 3 hours of going to bed. Exercise relieves stress and may help me relax and fall asleep.

AVOID CAFFEINE AND ALCOHOL. Caffeine is a stimulant that can interfere with sleep patterns. In addition to regular coffee, there are measurable amounts of caffeine in chocolate, some soft drinks and non-herbal tea. Alcohol also disturbs sleep patterns.

EAT LIGHT AT THE EVENING MEAL. Have a carbohydrate snack about an hour before bedtime. Also try a glass of milk.

AVOID SLEEPING PILLS. It is too easy to become dependent and too difficult to get off them.

GET SUNLIGHT IN THE AFTERNOON. It helps my body’s natural clock let me sleep at night.

CREATE A SLEEP-PRODUCING ATMOSPHERE. Low lighting, soothing music, a tepid bath, deep breathing, visualization of a beautiful setting, relaxation of body muscles or inspirational reading. Develop a nightly ritual of the things that work for me.

BESIDE MY BED, for those long wakeful hours, put dull reading material, a journal to record my feelings, note cards, a note pad for “to do” lists, a manicure set and a radio for late night talk shows and music.

IF ALL ELSE FAILS, go to the kitchen and make hot chocolate, adding marshmallows. Sip slowly, listen to the night sounds, look for the moon, the stars. Remember that nighttime is a good time for crying, and crying is healing.

I only need to get through one night at a time. I can do this. When I wake during the night, I will determine if I need to cry, get busy, prepare food or just feel God’s presence and a place of peace. Morning will come.

How do you cope with grief and insomnia? Share your ideas for making it through the night in the comments section below.

Related articles:
The Physical Stress of Grieving
Comfort Quickies: Self-Care While Grieving
What Helps When We're Stumbling in the Dark

Also by Marta Felber:
Loneliness Is To Be Felt
I Need a Hug
I Need to Exercise: Walking 'Down' Times Away
My Journal Is My Friend

Marta Felber, author of Grief Expressed When a Mate Dies and Finding Your Way After Your Spouse Dies, has held many counseling and consulting positions in the U.S. and abroad, including serving for 10 years as director and head counselor at a center for expatriates in Jakarta, Indonesia.




Image credit: Porcelaingirl/Flickr Creative Commons

Tagged: grief expressed, insomnia, living with loss, marta felber, physical health, share your story, when a mate dies

3 Comments

Jennifer Blackwell Comment by Jennifer Blackwell on August 13, 2009 at 12:41pm
i lost my boyfriend on 8/2/09 to a wreck and i hope this works i NEVER sleep any more and when i do get to doze off i dream hes walking away and wake up screaming but he wont turn around...
Sharon Stricklen Comment by Sharon Stricklen on August 19, 2009 at 1:26pm
Comment by Sharon Stricklen on August 10,2009. My husband has been gone since April of this year, nearly 5 months and at first it seemed like I was sleeping alot during the day, lots of naps and then going to bed very early, and of course I would be up at 4am. Then I sort of came back to my sences and said to myself if you stay up later maybe you will sleep a little later, so I have been doing that and it seems to be working. I also cut back on the afternoon naps, only once in a while, expecially if it is raining
Rosie Rivera Dulcich Comment by Rosie Rivera Dulcich on October 29, 2009 at 11:40pm
Since August 23, 2008 my sleep has been very little. I fall a sleep and I wake up every night talking to my daughter or yelling her name out. And there goes my sleep for the night. I will work myself so hard all day till it's time to go to bed that hasn't helped tried sleep aide's and that doesn't even put me out once I wake up and I'm awake just thinking about her missing her. Hope this works.

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