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File: toolbar.php Date: Wed, 07 Jan 2009 00:44:24 GMT Server: Apache/2.0.40 (Red Hat Linux) Accept-Ranges: bytes X-Powered-By: PHP/4.3.2 Connection: close Content-Type: text/html Sorting Out Sleep Patterns - Students Against Depression Jump to content



Real Student Stories

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Picture of Anna When depression hit for a second time, postgraduate student Sarah felt like she couldn’t face trying to get better again. Anti-depressants lifted her mood enough for counselling sessions to start making a real difference... more > >


Also in "Tackling Depression"... "It feels like you're awake all the time and just constantly thinking, and then when you do sleep, it's so fragmented and your dreams are infiltrated with the thoughts." Safa

 

"My friends used to call me a vampire because I'd be awake at night and sleep during the day. That can still often be the case." Gareth

 

"When you're depressed, you just want to sleep the whole time because you don't want to be you - you don't want to have to think. But I'm an insomniac anyway, and when I'm depressed I get even worse - I don't sleep at all." Fayola

Students Against Depression
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Sorting Out Sleep Patterns

Wake Up

Sleep deprivation is a form of torture!

It is not surprising that sleep deprivation or disruption is an effective method of torture. Sleep deprivation alone can bring about many of the symptoms of depression, in an experimental situation. But even too much sleep of the wrong kind can cause problems. The body is built to function best on a consistent pattern of sleep and waking, rather than on pure numbers of hours of sleep.

Why does depression disrupt sleep?

One theory* is that depression disrupts sleep because habits of depressed thinking during the day build up such high levels of stress and emotional arousal that when the brain tries to discharge the stress during periods of REM sleep it becomes exhausted rather than refreshed. This would explain the common experiences of

Strategies

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  understanding food and mood  > >

Links

More about how depression works: the depression habit spiral , depressed thinking , stress, anxiety & anger
More about depression in student life
More about related strategies for tackling depressed habits: raising activity levels , increasing exercise , understanding food and mood , checking alcohol and drugs , relaxation
Check page references (*): references and sources

© 2007 Charlie Waller Memorial Trust British Association for Counselling and Psychotherapy Award for Innovation 2006

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