Question:
Anyone know any good relaxation techniques to help me sleep?
bustagrimes10
2009-01-06 00:37:14 UTC
Does anyone know of any good self relaxation techniques to help me sleep? A while back someone had sent me some relaxation steps and things to think about while laying down, but seemed to have lost them. A random thing to ask I know. but if anyone has any self meditation techniques or something along those lines that would be great!
Eight answers:
reena r
2009-01-06 00:50:31 UTC
Relaxation Techniques



Relaxation techniques often can help people with sleep problems get a good night's sleep. Several relaxation techniques are listed below.



Progressive Relaxation

Toe Tensing

Deep Breathing

Guided Imagery

Quiet Ears





Progressive Relaxation

This technique is often most useful when you tape the instructions beforehand. You can tape these instructions, reading them slowly and leaving a short pause after each one.



Lie on your back, close your eyes.





Feel your feet. Sense their weight. Consciously relax them and sink into the bed. Start with your toes and progress to your ankles.





Feel your knees. Sense their weight. Consciously relax them and feel them sink into the bed.





Feel you upper legs and thighs. Feel their weight. Consciously relax them and feel them sink into the bed.





Feel your abdomen and chest. Sense your breathing. Consciously will them to relax. Deepen your breathing slightly and feel your abdomen and chest sink into the bed.





Feel your buttocks. Sense their weight. Consciously relax them and feel them sink into the bed.





Feel your hands. Sense their weight. Consciously relax them and feel them sink into the bed.





Feel your upper arms. Sense their weight. Consciously relax them and feel them sink into the bed.





Feel your shoulders. Sense their weight. Consciously relax them and feel them sink into the bed.





Feel your neck. Sense its weight. Consciously relax it and feel it sink into the bed.





Feel your head and skull. Sense its weight. Consciously relax it and feel it sink into the bed.





Feel your mouth and jaw. Consciously relax them. Pay particular attention to your jaw muscles and unclench them if you need to. Feel your mouth and jaw relax and sink into the bed.





Feel your eyes. Sense if there is tension in your eyes. Sense if you are forcibly closing your eyelids. Consciously relax your eyelids and feel the tension slide off the eyes.





Feel your face and cheeks. Consciously relax them and feel the tension slide off into the bed.





Mentally scan your body. If you find any place that is still tense, then consciously relax that place and let it sink into the bed.





Toe Tensing

This one may seem like a bit of a contradiction to the previous one, but by alternately tensing and relaxing your toes, you actually draw tension from the rest of the body. Try it!



Lie on your back, close your eyes.

Sense your toes.

Now pull all 10 toes back toward your face. Count to 10 slowly.

Now relax your toes.

Count to 10 slowly.

Now repeat the above cycle 10 times.





Deep Breathing

By concentrating on our breathing, deep breathing allows the rest of our body to relax itself. Deep breathing is a great way to relax the body and get everything into synchrony. Relaxation breathing is an important part of yoga and martial arts for this reason.



Lie on your back.





Slowly relax your body. You can use the progressive relaxation technique we described above.





Begin to inhale slowly through your nose if possible. Fill the lower part of your chest first, then the middle and top part of your chest and lungs. Be sure to do this slowly, over 8 to 10 seconds.





Hold your breath for a second or two.





Then quietly and easily relax and let the air out.





Wait a few seconds and repeat this cycle.





If you find yourself getting dizzy, then you are overdoing it. Slow down.





You can also imagine yourself in a peaceful situation such as on a warm, gentle ocean. Imagine that you rise on the gentle swells of the water as you inhale and sink down into the waves as you exhale.





You can continue this breathing technique for as long as you like until you fall asleep.



Guided Imagery

In this technique, the goal is to visualize yourself in a peaceful setting.



Lie on your back with your eyes closed.





Imagine yourself in a favorite, peaceful place. The place may be on a sunny beach with the ocean breezes caressing you, swinging in a hammock in the mountains or in your own backyard. Any place that you find peaceful and relaxing is OK.





Imagine you are there. See and feel your surroundings, hear the peaceful sounds, smell the flowers or the barbecue, fell the warmth of the sun and any other sensations that you find. Relax and enjoy it.





You can return to this place any night you need to. As you use this place more and more you will find it easier to fall asleep as this imagery becomes a sleep conditioner.





Some patients find it useful to visualize something boring. This may be a particularly boring teacher or lecturer, co-worker or friend.





Quiet Ears



Lie on your back with your eyes closed.

Place your hands behind your head. Make sure they are relaxed.

Place your thumbs in your ears so that you close the ear canal.

You will hear a high-pitched rushing sound. This is normal.

Listen to this sound for 10-15 minutes.

Then put your arms at your sides, actively r
Cate M
2009-01-06 08:43:29 UTC
In college I took a relaxation course (Seriously!). I was taught to put on relaxing music (anything mostly calm will do, such as classical), lay down, try to clear our heads and just breathe. But it's a special breathing technique- you breathe from the bottom part of your lungs so that your stomach goes up first before your chest. You breathe in very deeply (it's okay if you feel you may explode at first) and then open your mouth and breathe out slowly. It works really well for me no matter where I am and I don't even bother with the music anymore. Good luck relaxing! Also, a nice hot bath is good too.
anonymous
2013-12-16 05:17:53 UTC
Hi there! I don't know that you would call this necessarily a technique, but I like to use binaural beats to relax. I have high anxiety, but I don't want to take medicine. I discovered binaural beats about a year ago and they help ease my anxiety so I can focus more easily during the day and sleep better at night. I hope they work for you as well! Good luck. The link below is one of my favorites I have found so far on YouTube. If you like it let me know and I can share some more with you that I have found to be helpful.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AlztFeveCZo
YA Junkie
2009-01-06 09:09:09 UTC
A warm bath is a great way to relax to help you to sleep. If you can’t take a bath, you can give yourself a foot massage with slightly warm massage oil, sesame oil, or castor oil from a health food store.



What was very helpful to me, especially when my mind was racing, was to lie in bed and listen to relaxation CDs, especially those that contain someone speaking with relaxing music in the background. Many of these CDs are available on eBay for very low prices.



A helpful technique is to relax your body one part at a time. So you could relax your feet, your lower legs, upper legs, moving up from your lower belly up to your chest, etc., etc.



Of course, guided relaxation methods can help, imagining yourself in the country, the beach, or whatever is most soothing to you.



If you have annoying thoughts or personal issues that run thru your mind when you are trying to sleep, you might have to deal with those issues first. You might want to talk to a counselor or therapist about that. I suggest avoiding prescription sleeping pills unless nothing else helps.



There are herbs that are helpful for sleep, eg, valerian root, kava kava, chamomile, hops, passion flower, skullcap. Probably, valerian root and kava kava are the best. With some herbs, it can take a few weeks to build up in your system before it works.



You can also try 5-HTP, trytophan, GABA or melatonin (2-3 mg). I would not take melatonin for over a month unless your doctor says it is ok. It is a hormone produced by the pineal gland. If you take too much, your pineal gland might get "lazy" and produce less melatonin naturally.
anonymous
2009-01-06 08:51:45 UTC
drink some warm milk or have a bowl of oatmeal, both release seratonin, and if u want to relax, try a hot bath then read to get your mind off yourself. Try and lay down and think about your past like relaxing times if u have ever been camping or boating or just sitting in a park....stop fighting the sleep.
yeschef2003
2009-01-08 01:38:41 UTC
I would try binaural beats. They are tones that you listen to that promote your brainwaves to change in order to induce different states of mind including inducing sleep. You can find links to many free mp3s at http://blitzbeats.blogspot.com
gerberdaysee
2009-01-06 08:48:21 UTC
cross ur arms over your chest, and alternate taping eat hand on your shoulders, while counting how many times you tap, and take deep breathes... it calms you down so you can sleep. I hope this helps



ps it also works for stress :]
jun tao
2009-01-06 08:46:08 UTC
right before you get into some breathing exercises, take 2 sominex. be sure youre already in bed.


This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.
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