If nights feel heavy for weeks:
→ Speak with a trusted healthcare provider—not as a last resort, but as an act of self-respect.
→ Share this truth: “I’ve been listening to my body. Help me understand its song.”
You won’t “fix” sleep in one night.
But you might learn to welcome the quiet hours differently:
→ When you wake, don’t check the clock. Breathe instead.
→ If thoughts race, trace the grain of your wooden bedside table—anchor yourself in the now.
→ Keep a glass of water by the bed, but sip slowly. Hydration is kindness; urgency is stress.
And on the hardest nights?
Wrap yourself in this truth:
“This is not forever.
Dawn is patient.
And so am I.”
May your room hold you like a cradle.
May your breath slow like a river at dusk.
May you trust the dark enough to rest in it.
For in the space between waking and sleeping,
you are not alone.
You are exactly where you need to be—
learning, slowly,
to be kind to the keeper of your rest.With deep respect for your journey through the night