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One Couple's Experience With Long-Term Insomnia And The Man Who Helped Fix It

Insomnia Is No Fun In A Relationship, Here's One Couple's Experience
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As Lifestyle editor for The Huffington Post, I could reel off all sorts of facts, figures and advice about sleep.

Don't take your computer to bed. Don't drink caffeine after 6pm. Over 40% of Brits experience some sort of sleep deprivation and it's getting worse (due to smartphones).

The reality, as someone who has an insomniac spouse, is much different.

Although good sleep habits are important, when you're dealing with long term sleep deprivation, you are utterly at your wits end on how to deal with it. So what do you do when counting sheep and glasses of warm milk just don't cut it?

Here is our journey through insomnia and beyond, with the help of hypnotherapist Tim Smale.

My husband is asleep next to me.

This may sound like a fairly ordinary sentence, like: the cat sat on the mat, but it is remarkable for three reasons. First, he’s asleep before me. Second, he’s actually in bed at the same time I am. Third, he’s asleep.

As tough as life is for insomniacs, it isn’t that much easier for the spouse or partner who has to deal with it.

For most of our relationship my husband has been a bad sleeper, however it has really escalated in the last year or so. This ends up having a massive impact on our social life – you try dinner conversation when the other person is either crazy-eyed with tiredness or nodding into their soup – and call me a traditionalist, but I like the idea of going to bed together at the same time.

Those are the physical aspects.

The emotional ones are far more insidious. The other person will find it impossible not to resent you for sleeping, especially if, like me, you are able to sleep like a hibernating bear. You will find it hard to not feel affronted at being resented for performing a fairly routine bodily function.

Then there’s the constant updates like a Twitter feed. It’s all variations of the same theme: I feel so tired. God I’m tired. It’s alright for you, I’m tired.

I am not being flippant about it, but we reached a situation where his insomnia wasn’t working for me, and it definitely wasn’t working for him.

I was at my wits end when I bumped into an old colleague who confided in me about his insomnia. “Who fixed it?” I asked quickly.

Tim Smale, he’s amazing. He used hypnotherapy.”

In my line of work I know enough about hypnosis to know it isn’t all pendulums and making people hop on one foot. But my husband was another matter - I wasn't sure how he'd receive the idea of hypnotherapy. Still he had reached the point where he was ready to try anything.

Further digging reassured me about Tim’s credentials – he doesn’t just deal with sleep hypnosis but weight loss, self-confidence and so on. If anyone could get to the root of Rob’s sleep issues, he’d do it.

Rob had three sessions. After the first, I didn’t notice much difference. I asked Rob how the sessions were and he was fairly close-mouthed. After the second session I noticed more of a shift – and he described Tim as a kind of therapist who tackled the sleep problems but also delved into the surrounding issues.

And although it wasn’t like a dramatic switch, over the weeks, Rob actually began to sleep. Gone was the fidgetiness. Gone was the doomsday statement 10 minutes into bedtime of “I’m never going to sleep”. Gone was the anger at not being able to sleep.

The effect on our lives has been transformative. That’s not to say he doesn’t have the odd day of bad sleep but more often than not, he’s sleeping better than he ever did.

The sessions may seem like a lot of money (£250 per session), but you'll need two or three at most. And honestly, it's the price of a short break and will positively impact your life in a huge way.

Result? Absolutely.

I've never been a great sleeper. More of an in-bed worrier. But it had never been that bad.

Once full-blown insomnia took hold, it rapidly began destroying my life. Sorry wife, yes I'd become a moaner (about not sleeping, not in my sleep).

Work, my social life, and – crucially – my marriage were falling apart. Laying in bed at night in the sure knowledge I'd be awake when my wife got up to go to work wasn't so much chipping away at my sanity, it was hacking away at it with an axe.

I can't say hypnotherapy was something I would ever have considered – a bit hippie dippie for my tastes. But I went to see Tim with as much of an open mind as I could muster; and frankly I would have given voodoo a try if I thought there was a chance it would break the pattern before I completely fell apart.

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Tim Smale

While it is clearly part of how Tim approaches the process, he certainly clocked me for a bit of a sceptic and took care throughout to explain the science that informs the process throughout. I think he was left a little goggle-eyed at the scope and severity of the issues I felt needed to be resolved in my life to make any real process with both my sleep problems and their root causes, but he is clearly a man who relishes a challenge.

The first session was all kinds of things – relaxing, fun, fascinating – but a cure for my insomnia? I can't say I was terribly convinced. After all, Tim hadn't even mentioned sleep.

Aha! I'm sure he'd say. This, clearly, is where it's necessary to hammer home that this is hypno-therapy, not hypno-tism. I'm sure Tim would agree that in his experience of treating clients that whether they can't stop smoking, eating, gambling – start sleeping – or whatever, there's a common thread of issues around how we perceive ourselves and our ability to make changes in our lives that is the foundation of the problems in our lives over which we feel we have no control.

Pretty sensible stuff, and straight out of every self-help book ever written, right? But crucial to understanding why hypnotherapy is effective. This isn't some joker in a bad pastel suit making housewives do the chicken dance, but a clever, intuitive therapist using suggestion techniques to unpick negative self-perceptions and reinforce positive thought patterns.

In fact, not once in three sessions did Tim mention sleep while I was on the couch – but an ongoing straw poll of off-the-cuff responses to a range of questions around self-belief, confidence, fear (or lack of it) about the future and so on saw radical improvement from one appointment to the next.

And hey, my sleep began to improve. Now the super-critical scientist that lurks on my shoulder says there were other factors in play – and she'd be right. But it is very clear Tim has an important role to play in my returning to some semblance of normal sleep, despite my initial scepticism.

Tim Smale has clearly found his vocation – a profession that allows him to help those who believe themselves beyond help, and to do some with grace, charm and humour. Clearly this is more than just a job to him, the simple pleasure he gets in seeing his clients' lives improve shines through. And from the looks of the pile of half-full cigarette packets in a jumbled pile by his office door, he has had a great deal of success treating those who come to him, skeptical or not.

My sleep still isn't perfect. But as my wonderful wife says: result? Absolutely.

For more information, visit Mindworks.

Sleep Deprivation Can...
Increase Stroke Risk(01 of08)
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Even without the typical risk factors, like being overweight or having a family history, short sleep can up your risk for stroke, according to 2012 research. Adults who regularly slept fewer than six hours a night had four times the risk of stroke symptoms, HuffPost reported. (credit:stockdevil via Getty Images)
Lead To Obesity(02 of08)
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Too little sleep can spur some less-than-ideal food choices, including serving yourself larger portions, and a hankering for junk food, thanks to some complicated hormonal changes that occur when you don't get sufficient shuteye. It seems that six hours of sleep or less bumps up production of the hunger hormone ghrelin and limits leptin, which helps you balance your food intake, according to a 2012 review of 18 studies of sleep and appetite. (credit:Shutterstock)
Up Diabetes Risk(03 of08)
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A pair of small studies from 2012 examined the link between poor sleep and insulin resistance, a telltale risk factor for diabetes. One found that among healthy teenagers, the shortest sleepers had the highest insulin resistance, meaning the body is not using insulin effectively, according to the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases. The second study examined fat cells, in particular, and found that cutting back on sleep increased insulin resistance in these cells, even when diet and calorie intake were restricted, Health.com reported. (credit:Shutterstock)
Fuel Memory Loss(04 of08)
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You probably know that on the days when you are most tired, you're forgetful and unfocused -- but sleep deprivation can lead to permanent cognitive issues. The less we sleep, the less we benefit from the memory-storing properties of sleep. But additionally, a lack of sleep can cause "brain deterioration," according to a 2013 study, which may at least in part explain memory loss in seniors. (credit:Alamy)
Damage Bones(05 of08)
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At least in rats, long-term sleep deprivation seems to contribute to osteoporosis, according to a 2012 study. Researchers found changes to bone mineral density and bone marrow in the rodents when they were deprived of shuteye over a period of 72 days.

"If true in humans, and I expect that it may be, this work will have great impact on our understanding of the impact of sleep deprivation on osteoporosis and inability to repair bone damage as we age," Steven R. Goodman, Ph.D., editor-in-chief of Experimental Biology and Medicine, said in a statement.
(credit:Reza Estakhrian via Getty Images)
Increase Cancer Risk(06 of08)
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A small (but growing) body of research suggests that short and poor sleep can up risk for certain types of cancer. A 2010 study found that among 1,240 people screened for colorectal cancer, the 338 who were diagnosed were more likely to average fewer than six hours of sleep a night. Even after controlling for more traditional risk factors, polyps were more common in people who slept less, according to the study.

Getting just six hours of sleep a night has also been linked to an increase of recurrence in breast cancer patients. The study's author has pointed to more and better sleep as a possible pathway of reducing risk and recurrence.
(credit:Shutterstock)
Hurt Your Heart(07 of08)
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The stress and strain of too little sleep can cause the body to produce more of the chemicals and hormones that can lead to heart disease, according to 2011 research. The study found that people who slept for six hours or less each night and have problems staying asleep had a 48 percent higher risk of developing or dying from heart disease. (credit:Shutterstock)
Kill You(08 of08)
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It's not just heart problems that can lead to sleep-deprivation-related death. In fact, short sleepers seem to die younger of any cause than people who sleep about 6.5 to 7.5 hours a night, TIME reported. A 2010 study examined the impact of short sleep on mortality and found that men who slept for less than six hours of sleep a night were four times more likely to die over a 14-year period. The study's authors called this link "a risk that has been underestimated." (credit:kieferpix via Getty Images)