Why You Cannot Sleep at Night Even Though You Are Exhausted

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Master Anshin

Teachings of Master Anshin
Master Anshin
Stillness teacher. 40 years in silence, now sharing what was learned.

You lie down. The lamp is off. The body sinks into the mattress with
the heavy quality of a day that asked too much. And then it happens. The
mind quietly opens its eyes and begins to run. Tomorrow. The text you
forgot to send. The conversation that went sideways. The bill. The body
is heavy. The mind is awake. You stare at the ceiling and you wonder
what is wrong with you.

Nothing is wrong with you. You are experiencing what the old teachings
call wind that forgets to sit down. Modern science has caught up to it
and named it sympathetic nervous system overdrive. Both descriptions are
accurate. Both point to the same gentle path back to sleep, a path that
predates every sleep app and every supplement in the cabinet.

Why the Body and the Mind Get Out of Sync

Sleep is not the absence of activity. It is a specific state the body
enters when three signals all arrive together. Low light. A drop in body
temperature. And a parasympathetic nervous system, which is the system
that runs your body when there is no threat.

The modern world keeps the first two signals at bay for as long as
possible. Bright screens until the moment we close our eyes. Indoor
heating that does not let body temperature dip. But the third signal,
the parasympathetic switch, is the one most people break themselves on.

Throughout the day, the body has been at war with strangers. The
manager who wrote an irritated email. The seventeen browser tabs that
felt urgent. The news headline you read on a coffee break. Each one
fired the sympathetic system a little. By bedtime, the body has been
running with low grade alertness for sixteen hours. Lying down does not
turn that off. The body needs to be invited to put the alertness down.

This is why exhaustion and insomnia coexist. The body is tired from
the activation, not from physical labor. And the activation does not
care that you want to sleep.

The Two Hour Pre Sleep Window

Sleep does not begin when your head touches the pillow. Sleep begins
two hours earlier. Whatever you do in those two hours is the instruction
manual you hand your body about how the night should go.

If those two hours contain screens, news, sugar, alcohol, and intense
conversation, you have written a manual that says please stay awake. If
those two hours contain warmth, dim light, slow movement, and silence,
you have written a manual that says it is time to come down.

Most modern insomnia is not a sleep problem. It is a pre sleep
problem. You are not failing to fall asleep. You are succeeding at
staying activated until the moment you wanted to fall asleep.

Six Practices That Bring the Body Down

1. End Screens Ninety Minutes Before Bed

Not thirty minutes. Not while you wind down. Ninety. The blue light
matters less than the cognitive activation. A scroll is a thousand small
decisions in twenty minutes. The mind does not know how to stop deciding
when you finally close your eyes.

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Replace the last ninety minutes with a book on paper, a slow
conversation, or quiet hands doing something small. Folding laundry.
Cutting fruit for the morning. Writing one sentence by hand.

2. Warm Shower or Bath Sixty Minutes Before Bed

Warm water raises the surface temperature of the body. After the
water stops, the body cools. That cooling is one of the three signals
your brain uses to start sleep. A warm shower an hour before bed is
not luxury. It is biology, used on purpose.

3. Drink a Cup of Warm Tea

Chamomile. Lemon balm. Tulsi. Any caffeine free, slightly bitter,
gently warm cup. The act of drinking something warm at the end of the
day is older than every sleep aid in the pharmacy. The warmth tells the
body that the day is closing. The bitterness gently relaxes the
intestines. The ritual itself slows the mind.

4. Light a Single Candle and Watch It for Two Minutes

Before electricity, sleep was preceded by an hour of watching embers
settle. The mind learned to settle with them. Two minutes in front of a
single candle, sitting still, breathing slowly, is one of the most
profound nervous system regulators humans have ever invented. The flame
asks for nothing. It just is. Watching something that asks for nothing
teaches the mind to do the same.

5. The One Sentence Journal

Before you lie down, write one sentence by hand on a small piece of
paper. The sentence is not a to-do list. It is a release. What is
one thing I am letting go of tonight?
Then fold the paper. Set it
under the candle. Or burn it.

The mind is calmed by ritual the way the body is calmed by warmth.
The act of naming what you are setting down, and physically folding it
away, signals to the deeper nervous system that the day is finished.

6. Three Long Exhales in Bed

Once you are lying down, three slow exhales is the last invitation.
Inhale through the nose for four counts. Exhale through softly parted
lips for eight. Three times. The exhale is the body’s natural off
switch. The vagus nerve, activated by long exhales, signals to the
brainstem that the threat is gone. The body, finally believed, lets
go.

What to Do When the Mind Starts at 3 a.m.

Many people fall asleep without trouble but wake at three in the
morning with a racing mind. This is a specific physiology problem, not a
willpower problem. At three a.m., cortisol begins to rise in
preparation for waking. If your body has been chronically stressed, the
cortisol rise is steeper and reaches higher. The mind, sensing the
cortisol, finds something to worry about, because that is what an alert
mind does.

Do not engage the worry. Do not pick up the phone. Sit up, drink a
small sip of water, and do three slow exhales. Then lie back down. If
the mind starts again, repeat. The cortisol wave usually passes in
twenty to thirty minutes. The job is to wait it out without feeding
it.

Over weeks, the cortisol curve flattens. The 3 a.m. wake-ups become
shorter, then rarer. The body learns that nothing terrible is happening
in the middle of the night, and it stops sounding the alarm.

What to Do When Nothing Works

If you have practiced these for a month and the sleep has not
improved, please see a licensed clinician. Chronic insomnia can have
medical causes that no breath practice will reach. Thyroid imbalances,
sleep apnea, certain medications, and trauma can all keep the body
awake regardless of what you do at night. There is no shame in needing a
diagnostic eye. Sleep is too important to leave to wishful thinking.

What the practices on this page do beautifully is fix the most common
cause: a nervous system that has not been given permission to come
down. For that cause, they are nearly always enough.

Frequently asked questions

Quick answers

QWhy do I feel tired all day but wide awake at bedtime?
ADaytime tiredness is usually low energy, not low arousal. Bedtime
awakeness is high arousal, not high energy. They feel similar but are
opposite. The fixes are different. Daytime tiredness wants movement
and light. Bedtime awakeness wants warmth and silence.
QIs melatonin safe to take every night?
ASpeak to a clinician about any supplement. In general, low-dose
melatonin is well tolerated for short periods, but it works on the
signal of falling asleep, not on the cause of staying awake. The
practices on this page address the cause. They tend to be more
durable.
QWill exercise help me sleep better?
AYes, but timing matters. Vigorous exercise in the four hours
before bed raises core body temperature and cortisol. A slow walk
after dinner is excellent. A late evening workout often makes
insomnia worse.
QWhat if I cannot fall asleep without my phone?
AYou can. You have just trained yourself to need it. Replace the
phone with a small ritual, like the candle or the journal sentence.
Within two weeks the dependence will lift. The phone is not soothing
your mind. It is keeping it just engaged enough to never come down.
QWhere can I learn more practices for sleep?
AThe full evening routine is in my e-book, The Quiet Path,
available on the
homepage.
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Master Anshin: a serene landscape with misty mountains and a winding path leading to a tranquil lake

About the author. Master Anshin has spent more than four decades in the bamboo groves and mountain temples of the East, studying breath, herbs, rhythm and rest. He is the author of The Quiet Path and writes plainly about practices anyone can begin tonight.

Important notice. This article is for informational and educational purposes only. It is not medical advice, a diagnosis, or treatment. Consult a licensed healthcare professional before making significant changes to your sleep, diet, exercise or wellness routine.

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