Daily Deals from a Nerd Mom

Navigating Life 🎮 One Nerdy Adventure at a Time

When You’re Exhausted but Your Brain Refuses to Sleep

2–4 minutes

I woke up out of a deep sleep for absolutely no reason.

The house was quiet. The room was dark. My body was heavy with exhaustion.

And yet, somehow, my brain clocked in for a full shift.

My eyes were so tired I could barely keep them open. I closed them, hoping sleep would take the hint and come back. Instead, my mind flipped on every fluorescent light it could find.

  • Did I forget something important?
  • What about the conversation from earlier?
  • What if tomorrow is harder then I think it will be?
  • Why is my heart beating like this?

Within minutes, I wasn’t just awake. I was anxious about being awake.

If you’ve ever experienced this strange midnight tug-of-war, you know how frustrating it is. Your body wants rest. You brain wants to host a committee meeting about your entire life.


Sometimes waking up in the middle of the night is just biology doing what biology does.

During sleep, especially deep sleep, our bodies cycle through changes in hormones.

  • Cortisol can rise in the early morning hours.
  • Blood sugar can dip.
  • Stress can sneak in through the side door.

When we wake suddenly, the brain can misinterpret that shift as a signal to be alert.

And once you’re alert in the dark, with no distractions, your thoughts suddenly have a stage and a microphone.

For those of us who carry a lot mentally; caregivers, parents, spouses, planners, fixers; the night can become the only quiet place. Unfortunately, quiet space is also where unprocessed thoughts stretch out and get loud.


Here’s the pattern I’ve noticed:

  1. Wake up.
  2. Try to force sleep.
  3. Brain starts replaying things from years ago.
  4. Anxiety joins the party.
  5. Now I’m worried I’m not sleeping.
  6. Now I’m worried about being worried.

It becomes less about the original thought and more about the fear of how tomorrow will feel if I don’t fall back to sleep.

That layer of frustration is often what makes it worse.


Not perfectly. Not magickly. Just gently.

Instead of wrestling in my mind, I try to give it something boring to do.

  • Counting backwards slowly.
  • Focusing on the feeling of the blanket against my hands.
  • Putting one hand on my chest and one on my stomach and slowing my breathing.

I’ve even fallen asleep trying to think of boring things to think about.

Sometimes I imagine my thoughts like cars on a highway. I don’t chase them, I don’t stop traffic. I just watch them pass.

Other times, I get up for a few minutes. Low/no light, no scrolling, just a reset so my bed doesn’t become a battle ground.

And one sentence I repeat to myself is:

Even if I don’t sleep perfectly, I will survive tomorrow.

Because the truth is, I’ve had horrible sleep before, and I made it through.


You’re not broken.

You’re not weak.

You’re not the only one laying in the dark wishing your brain had an off switch.

Sometimes your body is tired but your nervous system is still humming. That doesn’t mean that it will stay that way.

Eventually, the thoughts will slow, the edge softens, and the body remembers how to rest.

And even if tonight isn’t perfect, tomorrow will still come. You will still show up, and you will still be enough.

Photo by cottonbro studio


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14 responses to “When You’re Exhausted but Your Brain Refuses to Sleep”

  1. I hate when this happens. I will have to keep your tips in mind when it happens again. Which I know it will!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Right?! It’s one of those things where you just know it’s going to happen again, so you might as well have a little plan ready. Hope the tips help next time your brain decides to pull an all-nighter on you!

      Like

  2. I have the worst sleep patterns in the world, and I make it even worse by scrolling social media at 2 a.m. I am going to give your ideas a try for a more healthful sleep.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Oh, the 2 a.m. scroll is such a trap! The light from the screen alone can trick your brain into thinking it’s time to wake up. I really hope some of these ideas help you get more restful sleep. You deserve it!

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  3. I hate when this happens although it is often when I have a lot to do and no help – the perils of Motherhood. I find that lavender essential oil can help, the esters relax the mind.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Lavender is such a good one, I love that you brought that up. I actually have a sleeping mask infused with lavender that I use sometimes.

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  4. jerry godinho Avatar

    Thank you for sharing such an honest and relatable take on the struggle of trying to sleep when your brain just won’t quiet down. It’s something so many of us experience but rarely talk about so openly. I appreciate how you acknowledged both the emotional and physical frustration that comes with restless nights, while also offering gentle reminders that it’s okay to seek patterns, routines, and support. Your perspective made me feel seen and encouraged me to be kinder to myself on those tough sleep battles.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Being kinder to ourselves on the hard nights is something I am still learning too. We are all in this together!

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  5. Gosh, this sounds like me. I hate when this happens and it’s been happening more than usual for me. I do know I also shut it down early and that affects my sleep too. I loveeeee your last statement and its true: no matter what “We will survive tomorrow”.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. It really is such a great reminder when everything feels like too much. I hope the nights start to smooth out for you soon.

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  6. Natural Beauty And Makeup Avatar
    Natural Beauty And Makeup

    Laying awake while a brain keeps working is exhausting! Counting backwards always helps, but I’ll try your other ideas too. I love a good sound sleep.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Counting backwards is seriously underrated! There is something about giving your brain a boring enough task that it just gives up and drifts off. I hope some of the other ideas work for you too.

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  7. Waking up in the middle of the night is never fun. I’ve been there where I know I need to sleep but my brain says no. I try to just relax, scroll on my phone for a few, or play a game like candy crush to help ease the anxiety.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Candy Crush gives your mind something repetitive to focus on, which is kind of the same idea as counting backwards! Whatever gets you through those rough nights. I turn on the nightlight mode & dim my phone down. I’ve been known to wake up with the phone still in my hand & glasses on my face LOL

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