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You Are Getting Sleepy

Lifestyle-Based Solutions for Insomnia

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
For readers of Arianna Huffington’s The Sleep Revolution—an individualized approach to sleep issues from the expert doctors who wrote The Insomnia Answer.
 
Good sleep is an elusive goal: The harder you try to fall asleep, the less likely you are to be successful. Insomnia is stoked by different habits, schedules, stresses, beliefs, and even personality types—but there is no single pill or therapy to reverse it. Sleep cannot be forced—ultimately, it must come to you.
 
While insomnia treatments can set the stage, the best thing a person can do to ready themselves for sleep is to get sleepy. This practical, easy-to-follow guide written by two founding experts in behavioral sleep medicine will help you achieve one of the most important parts of staying healthy: a good night’s rest. Taking into account the particular challenges that stand in your way to better sleep, Glovinsky and Spielman:
 
  • Discuss changes you can make to your daily routines to induce sleepiness
  • Walk you through applying standard cognitive behavioral treatments
  • Introduce new, promising interventions for managing anxiety, depression, an out-of-sync biological clock, dependence on medication, and more
  •  
    True sleepiness is the only reliable portal to sleep. You Are Getting Sleepy will guide you there.
     
    Praise for The Insomnia Answer
    “The book to pull under the covers whether you’re fighting temporary insomnia . . . or a long-term sleep disorder.” —Health magazine
     
    “For insomniacs who don’t want a cosmetic solution, this guide digs deeper, and is likely to get better, more permanent results.” —Kirkus Reviews
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      • Publisher's Weekly

        June 5, 2017
        Glovinsky and Spielman address readers suffering from insomnia with an informed and straightforward approach. Early on, they observe that people with sleep problems are often “trying too hard to sleep” and offer a seemingly simple alternative: “Stop trying to sleep.” The authors invite readers to skip around the book’s contents in search of personally relevant information and pose questions to pinpoint each reader’s specific problem, e.g., “Are you fatigued instead of sleepy?” and “Are you too depressed to sleep?” Their suggested remedies include “learning how to rest” and having only “limited daylight exposure.” Each chapter closes, usefully, with a summary of information shared. Medication is a frequent topic and the book treats it delicately, discussing when to use sleep aids, when it’s likely you’re getting sleep cues from a pill and not yourself, and forming an “exit strategy.” Glovinsky and Spielman are straightforward in their encouragement, insisting that “your sleep may be temperamental, but it is not broken,” even if it takes weeks or months to improve. In the many steps they recommend, they lead readers toward the belief that “you have sleep in you” and that you can “stop seeking sleep elsewhere,” a powerful message for insomniacs. Agent: Kerry Sparks, Levine Greenberg Rostan.

      • Library Journal

        July 1, 2017

        In a world where daily physical labor is increasingly rare, insomnia is rife. This title posits that, in order to sleep, you must get sleepy, and details ways to encourage sleepiness when you want it (and not when you don't). Some suggestions are familiar: don't exercise near bedtime; no caffeine after 3 p.m.; no liquor after dinner; no TV or computers in the hour before bedtime; use your bed only for sex and sleeping; etc. But the authors also go more deeply into cognitive behavioral techniques, discussing ways to adjust your internal clock, relaxation exercises, and the effects of pharmacological sleep aids. There is less emphasis on what, specifically, to do to promote sleepiness and more on the ways and whys that each strategy works or fails. Overall, this is an exhaustive study of our psychology and its physical responses, but it offers no quick fix, because there isn't one. VERDICT At times the writing is too technical for most lay readers. A more readable choice is W. Chris Winter's The Sleep Solution: Why Your Sleep is Broken and How to Fix It.--Susan B. Hagloch, formerly with Tuscarawas Cty. P.L., New Philadelphia, OH

        Copyright 2017 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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    • English

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