Follow
Share

Dealing with a persistent rodent problem at Mom’s house has finally pushed situation over the cliff for me. Terminex is on it now. Next day was shocked to hear there’s no waiting list at the AL I had already figured would work best for her. Made appointment for 2 days later. Lunch there w Mom, husband and I then look at room. Now all I can think of is getting getting her there as quickly as possible. Tour is today. We will eat lunch then all 3 look at room. I leave deposit to hold it. Slept not a wink last nite including anxiety around 4 am over not being able to call AL to cancel tour until they open. Day #4 of insomnia. Will be giving my cell to husband as soon as he gets up w instructions to not let me have it unless I get decent sleep. Then he takes it back at 7:30p. Going to crawl in extra bed to see what happens. Help!

This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
There are several non prescriptions remedies you can try, first are magnesium foot soaks. Just add a cup of magnesium crystals to warm not hot water and soak your feet for 30 minutes. Second is tart cherry supplements or powder it has a ton of melatonin to relax you and get ready for sleep.
Third, try some Ashwagandha it is an adaptogenic herb that fights stress and relaxes your whole body.
Lastly there is CBD oil that is fantastic for relaxation and whole body health.
Yes, CBD is legal in all 50 states and is truly a miracle plant in my opinion. My preferred brand is Charlottes Web by the Stanley brothers. It is pricey but so very worth it.
Remember you can’t help anyone unless you take good care of your first, trust me I learned the hard way.
Best of luck to you!
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

Sleeping tablets are tricky. Fine for a short term problem, but very easily addictive. I have a 3 night maximum for taking them without a break. I got myself addicted years ago, and coming off it was bad – it took two weeks and was like permanent jet lag. OTC antihistamine tablets are an easy option for very short term help, if you are one of the majority that gets drowsy: they are not addictive, but they stop working after just a few nights. Alcohol is alluring because it puts me to sleep quickly (as well as being a relief at the end of a bad day), but it keeps me awake in the middle of the night. I’m a reader, and these days I read something boring when I go to bed, then turn the light off when I can’t be bothered going on. When I wake in the night, I often think through a story book or movie that I can remember really well. It keeps my mind off worrying things, often makes me drop off, and is more pleasant while I am awake.

I hope that you feel less stirred up very soon, and that all the problems resolve successfully.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report
anonymous815183 Sep 2018
Antihistamines are not good for older people. Look that up online. They affect the brain negatively,

For sleep I have a number of choices and vary them a bit.

--One melatonin tab (2 mgm) and/or a magnesium tab.
--Same bedtime routine every night.
--No tv for an hour before retiring.
--Read a pleasant book for 1/2 hour before turning out the light.
--In cooler weather, I might drink a warm cup of tea made with catnip, valerian, or lemon balm. Don't use the catnip too frequently.
--Wrap feet in a soft blanky to keep them warm.
--When sleep won't come anyway, I visualize the word SLEEP (in script) and mentally trace the word letter by letter over and over. OR if the letters are in print, I keep repeating the word over and over.

Concentrate on mentally tracing or repeating whatever word or image you choose--bringing your mind back to the job every time it strays. In a week or less, if you do this every night, you should be able to do it without your mind wandering.
It's all about not letting your mind stray from one thing to another and keeping the brain stirred up with problems you likely would focus on. And it's about settling down, making the mind peaceful and drowsy.And sleep naturally follows.

Good idea look up online any herbs/ supplements I mention, and, if you have questions, ask your doctor if they are okay for you. Many of us are magnesium deficient, but, for one example, ppl with AFib should not take it w/o doctor's okay.

My experience was that some nights the person i cared for would be up all night himself. Which meant i didn't dare go to sleep myself. Which makes me wonder why i never thought to run my sleep aid supplements past my dementia person's doctor for approval. They might have helped both of us!

I hope these suggestions work as well for you, Bellerose, as they do for me.
PS You canceled the AL tour?
(1)
Report
Bellerose63,

I'm not familiar with those meds, but I do know that clonopin is a good standard anti-anxiety med. I would not think that a GP would be as well trained in those meds as a psychiatrist is. My wife was on clonopin for years for her anxiety.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

Bellerose,
I did the same thing when I had to move my Mom to Memory Care. I was a nervous wreck the whole week and felt like I never slept. I have had trouble getting to sleep and staying asleep for a couple of years. I've done all the stuff they tell you to do but I finally had to have a bit of medicinal help. Ativan 1/2 mg. works well without a hangover. I only take it occasionally on the nights before I go to work.

It really is maddening to lie there and watch my husband's head hit the pillow and he's snoring. I ask him to roll over and he does. I lay there and, since it's quiet, the mind goes into hyperdrive. I start praying but then more problems come to mind.

Lately I've typed in Meditation Music on the IPad. It's very relaxing and I think it's better than white noise for me. The room should be slightly cool (ha, not in THIS weather!) and completely dark. You should not eat or exercise near the time you go to bed. No alcohol or caffeine many hours before bed. Maybe try a new pillow for your bed-it helped in my case. Oh, and no TV or Internet 1 hour before bedtime. That's the hard part.

I bet you will have more success sleeping AFTER all is said and done. Good luck.
Helpful Answer (6)
Report
Bellerose63 Aug 2018
Ty SueC1957, do we have shift work in common? Thank God mine ended before it completely wrecked my health 19years ago. Easy to forget it’s said to age you 2years for each 1 worked. Ad vice on internet-tv has prompted me to get husband to monitor my phone surfing activity and let charge run down as it sits where he can see if I pick it up.
Mom’s 1st night in new home at AL will be in a few weeks. Still in shock at how well she received news. Sad at how long we had to keep her at home refusing hired help
but with her age 91 and solid health ( bld pressure and thyroid Rx’s only) it was only way to protect her financially.
Looking into Ativan.
(1)
Report
I agree with cmagnum - sounds like you have anxiety. Your doctor could prescribe something to help you through this stressful time. You need your sleep! (Bet that was a real eye-opener). Take care of yourself.
Helpful Answer (4)
Report

I think that you need to see a doctor about this plus see a counselor about your anxiety.
Helpful Answer (4)
Report
Bellerose63 Aug 2018
GP took me off of restoril I had been on for years- side effects overlap with Fibromyalgia /18+ yrs ago diagnosed. Yes, will approach him for that Rx again...hadn’t thought of that! Weaned me off using Phychiatrist for writting rx’s and then I finished on my own breaking up 7.5s gradually. Was taking an AZO dye pill, naproxen, melatonin to sleep and psychiatrist policy was drug screening. Dye pill for sleep seemed to excite my GP as he said ‘perfectly safe even for every day use in case of insomnia’ . Will see if GP is ok w maybe 14 not 30 of the temaz-restoril after he learns we are moving Mom by the end of August.
(2)
Report
Room darkening curtains, fan in the room for white noise (not a ceiling fan, a small box fan pointed away from you) melatonin 10mg are all decent helps. But it sounds like stress is what’s preventing sleep. If you’re thinking of canceling a needed assisted living arrangement that’s needed, then don’t cancel, second thoughts are normal. Hope you get some rest, I’ve had my times without any sleep and it’s maddening
Helpful Answer (3)
Report

I must have missed something. Why are you canceling the tour?

I don’t believe what you’re suffering from is exactly insomnia. I don’t sleep either—maybe an hour a night. I doze off but am up an hour later. This goes in all night. I call it “the mouse on the wheel”. Financial worries, hubby’s health, the messy house, the thoughts all line up outside my head and wait for me to doze off. I’ve tried everything from Ambien to Zzzzquil (nasty stuff, btw)

I’m sure that when all this is over, you will be able to sleep. Give yourself a week and if you’re still tossing and turning, call your doctor. But understand that doctor’s don’t like to hand out sleep aids any longer. You may need to invest in a white noise machine.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report
Bellerose63 Aug 2018
No 2nd thoughts AT ALL! Other than so much has to happen in our lives during transition into AL. Appointment was lunch at noon with mom, my husband, myself then room tour including placing deposit on unit to hold plus time it takes to sit in office going over AL info, policies, etc. Mom and my husband both have ~ 3 hour outing limit. Spent hours last nite furious bec had AL appt too frazzled to get that i could easily reschedule. Have rescheduled for 2 days fr now just myself to go in w deposit and room tour. Keeping it short in case insomnia still with me. Felt the load lift.
(3)
Report
This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Ask a Question
Subscribe to
Our Newsletter