The suggestion about going from a lit environment to a dark bedroom and the abrupt change in stimulantion caught my attention. No matter how tired i may be, as soon as i turn out the light, I'm wide awake and it takes at least an hour to fall asleep. Occasionally I've tried leaving on a salt lamp that gives off a warm glow. I'll try doing that more often and see if it helps.
So many of my ADHD adult clients have a delayed sleep phase. I've had some really good results pulling the sleep phase earlier with use of light and dark exposure and melatonin six hours before sleep onset. Light wearables like glasses and visors are so convenient to use for morning light exposure. I've had a client move from a sleep onset of 3am to around 11:30pm. It's made a great change to their life, and now with the knowledge of how to shift their circadian rhythm, they are more able to get up for work and are significantly less sleep deprived. I see this as an area where education and treatment need to be widely disseminated.
@@ritasjourney light exposure glasses or visors, such as Propeaq, Re-Timer, AYO, or Luminette 3. 30 minutes mid morning. Light exposure is an evidence based treatment for circadian rhythm sleep disorders and depression.
I'm not diagnosed with anything, but I've had delayed sleep phase. 2-3am was my natural rhythm, in stressful periods it could be delayed as far back as 6-7am. When it came to that, I had great success resetting it by just staying awake for a day, and collapsing around 9-10pm, eventually stabilizing around midnight. Then I saw some Huberman stuff, and started getting sun exposure as soon as I'd wake up. After 3 days, I had no trouble staying in the 10pm-1am zone for weeks. Better quality as well. Also, if I woke up earlier than I was supposed to to go to the toilet, I'd use prop welding goggles (bc i couldn't make the hallway and the toilet dark), so I don't get light exposure so I could get back to sleep for those 3-4 needed hours. Later I tried all that with melatonin, and my sleep quality increased significantly.
Thank for you for information. I have been taking 3-6mg of melatonin approx 2 hours before bedtime. I go to bed between 11pm-12am however I consistently wake up every 2 or 3 hours. I regularly find it hard to fall back asleep. Do you think taking melatonin earlier in the day would help? Any other tips that may help me to sleep without waking up regularly?
@@emmetw Sleep behaviour is complex and is dependent on a lot of factors. Working out what's happening with your sleep would require a proper assessment with someone who knows what they are doing (not someone who just hands out a sheet of sleep hygiene practices). If you can, I would suggest finding a health practitioner with specialises in sleep to have a proper look at the whole picture, since treatment recommendations really have to be evidence-based and focused on the specific issues.
I’m so pleased you are still active in ADHD research and are offering UA-cam videos to the public. As a female who was diagnosed in middle age (~35 yo; I’m now 55), your work has helped explain SO much-a million thanks! Question: would you consider paper-format books “media”? Podcasts? Music? There are so many forms of media, that it’s hard to know what you mean. Blessings to you!
Why isn't the link between sleep disorders and ADHD talked about MORE? I've know about ADHD for decades but this is the FIRST I'm hearing sleep disorders can exacerbate ADHD. Thank you for this info. Sleep studies for all ADHDers!
Wow, this whole video hits home. Everything hits so hard explaining my childhood bedtime that I typed out a novel. Went and saved that in my notes and posted this instead. But, I will share, I did well in school but could never get homework done, or pay close attention in class. I was an oddity to the principal, multiple whacks a day and still would let homework go undone. I’d do well on tests though, but principal had teachers watch me during class to see what I was doing with my time. I had the feelings I was being watched, too, but the consensus was that if I only applied myself I could do something. These squirrels in the head bite sometimes, but I’m doing something worthwhile in spite of them. 😂 🐿️
You are a gift to the world with both a sense of humor and such a deep clinical, thoroughly researched and compassionate dedication to those of us who truly suffer with ADHD and it many complexities. Thank you for your ongoing work, your books, your videos and your good will. You are greatly needed and appreciated.
Honestly I experienced the first time after 38 years going to bed without needing a audio book and getting up without using the snooze button 3 times after getting an ADHD diagnose in the age of 45 and started taking a stimulant (Elvanse). Also I feel now awake during the day and I reduced coffin consume from 5 big cups to zero without missing anything. I'm happy but also angry that I did not discover this earlier and thought that life must be that hard and now discovered that it isn't for most of the people and that it doesn't need to be that hard for me either.
Dr. B! You’re on 🔥, sir… so many helpful videos in such quick succession! And you know that ADHD folk tend to not stand on ceremony; we are honoured to hang out with you as you chill in your bathrobe. ☺ Also delighted to watch your subscriber numbers slowly but steadily climb; this is an invaluable gift that you are providing for all of us and I sincerely hope that people around the world will watch, learn and pass it along. Well done! I had neither anxiety nor defiance but always issues with sleep as I felt alert, at my most insightful, interested and creative in the evening. Sleep clinics announced I had “delayed onset sleep”… which was no help whatsoever. Diagnosed with ADHD in middle age, I finally understood why. Now I find that comfy headphones , listening to a calm, soothing book or podcast (much more than music) can help me fall asleep. I force myself to lie still as if I toss and turn too much, I’ll miss what the narrator is saying. Focusing on the words of another means that my own brain whirs less, and off to The Land of Nod I gently trudge.
I suffered lifelong anxiety (until medicated properly) that expressed itself as a deep, restless boredom when I was young. “Only boring people get bored,” my mother would tell me, endlessly. I sure showed HER who was “boring”… 😂🤦♀️
I am one of those 20% whose sleep regulation has improved since stimulant medication. I think it's because it's helps me self-regulate during the day and so night time is less chaotic.
In childhood i had all that problems (have been sleeping with light, etc.). And almost all of my life i was afraid of going to bed. Now i can`t sleep well unless i`ve moved aprox. 4 hours on foot and/or cycling. (Yeah, i`ve been drinking before, but it doesn`t help the long run:).
I when I was in the elementary school I used to wake up at5 am, prepare my homework and study. I am devastated now after a lifelong struggle not knowning what was wrong with me. Too late now to know that I had and have ADHD. Thanks for the video.
It is hard to process the late discovery that there really was something different. We struggled for so long against a strong, invisible current which nobody else seemed to experience. I'm glad you've found out now, and I hope things can get a little easier for you in future. You're not alone. Take care.
2:10 im very very glad to know that im not the only person who has adhd and struggles with anxiety, i have social anxiety, i hate adhd and social anxiety so much, i feel nervous going outside. Thanks for these videos👍
I found that walking six to seven thousand steps a day makes it easier to fall asleep. Before this I exercised for 45 minutes a day, but being active throughout the day was more helpful. Even walking half an hour to an hour, a few hours before bed makes it easier to sleep. Thank you for taking time to make these videos doctor!
I relate to this a lot as an adult. Due to family dysfunction as a child, I was responsible for my own bedtime from the time I was ten. At the worst, I would be up until 1am doing homework (went to a private school) and rarely got enough sleep. I had insomnia in college. I got meds for it. I started staying up late to write after I graduated. Since I’ve struggled to find a job, that has continued to the detriment of my social life.
Excellent and very informal video. But the *only* reason you could come up with, as to why ADHD kids have more screen time, is "Parents are using it as a babysitter". Seriously? That is literally so boomer, and very unprofessional. I am the one with ADHD, not my kid. But I know for me, I use screens for much more than to just occupy myself: - Learning stuff. I have so many interests, and am always on the hunt for new things to learn. - Providing background so I can focus. - Keeping me awake when intrusive sleep risks making me fall asleep during the day. - Social interactions which nowadays is a lot online, and even more for my kid. - Unwinding when I am too tired to do anything, but doing very relaxing activites makes me feel on edge, because they are *too* calm.
I felt the same way about this, but I am a boomer with screens in my bedroom to try and fall asleep or trying to re-fall asleep every night around 3-4 am. A podcast with a timer is most helpful, although I sometimes wake up when the podcast has stopped playing and my mind starts overthinking again.
Thanks for the topic🙏🏻 it’s extremely important I believe. I was diagnosed with generalised anxiety disorder for years, complex cptsd, and since 2016 started to struggle with severe sleep problems. And this year I was finally diagnosed with ADHD (I’m 43), which explained all. It was blessing🙏🏻… Long story short, I know that for me (adhd combination type), having comorbidity such as GAD, it’s so so much more difficult to manage sleepless nights. Sleep problems became my trauma really. And every time I have bad night sleep, it triggers the hole mechanism of anxiety, which triggers sleep problems, and my ADHD plays a crucial role for both, and creates a vicious circle🤪 (I of course, did years of huge psychotherapy work, good diet, supplements, exercises, which was and is great! But didn’t do much for sleep. And I’ve tried many sleep strategies that actually made me worse. Things like CBTI, sleep hygiene, meditation, etc. And the more work around sleep the worse outcomes, and more anxiety. What helped? antidepressant medications really)… But now when I know my brain better and I accept my differences, is definitely a relief. However, it’s hard to find a resources on the topic, so video like this is definitely helpful. But still I would love to hear or read something specific related to adhd and sleeplessness anxiety🙏🏻
I have the same issue with a vicious cycle of sleep anxiety, triggered by a bad night and then spiralling for months of insomnia. It IS traumatic! The more 'therapy' I'm pointed towards, the more stressful sleep becomes!
If using this method, take serious precautions regarding driving, heavy machinery, etc. ADHD itself is a risk factor, and add sleep deprivation and any stimulant medication 'crash' and those are concurrent risk factors. I hurt myself pretty badly due to sheer unconscious clumsiness during this type of scenario.
Ironically, reading is a very stimulating activity for me. I used to stay up all night reading novels as a kid, and my mom would check on me to make sure my light was off and I was actually asleep, but I would just hide the book under my pillow and hide the reading lamp as well. It's a terrible activity for me to do to wind down before bed, because I will more likely stay up if I read
My trick is reading non fiction books on topics I find interesting in itself but may be somewhat dry, not too exciting to keep me awake yet interesting. Books that have worked for me are in the range of Sapiens and How To Change Your Mind
Having experienced sleep issues for as long as I can remember, the problem I always experience is my brain not shutting down. The over-thinking is horrible and the quieter it is the worse it is to fall asleep, over-thinking can be something like just going over the days events in my head, rehearsing stupid useless conversations that will never happen, thinking about what I am going to do the next day, sudden flashes of insight into something, while useful later NOT helpful when trying to fall asleep, ear worms and not just snippets of songs but phrases, words or names repeated ad nauseam until I want to bash my head against the wall to get it to stop, for that last one the only solution I have found is to listen to music, loud enough to hear the words clearly but not loud enough to keep me awake, for the rest white noise something as simple as a fan running.
My experience is so similar to yours. The random phrases, repetitive brain chatter, and oh God the earworms! Drives me mental. I might try your approach, thanks for sharing.
My flashes of insight are often so useful and I'm like, 'seriously, RIGHT NOW you had to have this realization, that you're now compelled to go write it down, because you'll forget it tomorrow? Srsly brain?!'
I wonder if some of these studies controlled for chronic stress and depression. It's hard for me to imagine chronic stress from ADHD not playing a part in everything I do, and I know that the worse my stress and anxiety are, the worse my sleep is. If I were trying to identify a mechanism, that would be a big one for me.
Thank you so much Doctor Russell. You are a blessing to this syndrome that sometimes or on daily bases its a really nightmare. Its much apreciate it by me all your videos and research. God bless you.
I have found putting on familiar audio books to help a lot. They can’t have loud sound effects or anything that can startle, and I have to have finished the book before so that I don’t stay awake to not miss the story. Then I put them on a 3 hour timer and have them read me to sleep :)
14:00 Gotta push back on this a bit. I take Atomoxetine which has been a game changer for brain fog, focus, motivation, emotional regulation, anxiety and general outlook on life. HOWEVER it has made my insomnia much worse. It is extremely difficult to fall asleep without the aid of Gabapentin which still does not work half the time and I wake many times throughout the night and get a "full" nights sleep about 2 nights a week. I was off of it recently and was able to sleep through the night more easily but this came with a cost of the return of the worst of my ADHD symptoms mainly horrible brain fog. Watching this and other videos in hope of finding a solution.
I think your med recomendations for different situations was very helpful and the no electronics an hour or so before bed REALISTIC. I have noticed lately issues with waking quite early and my mind beginning to race and i end up being up for an hour. I wake up tired. I was diagnosed with ADHD last month and im still figuring it out.
In an ideal world for people with delayed sleep onset I’d say get an outside job that starts early in the morning. I work seasonally and I’m awake at 5:30am and in the sun by 6:30am until 1-4pm most days. I can fall asleep like a baby by 9-10pm most days. However the moment we stop working I go back to my normal horrendous sleep schedule no matter how hard I try to force myself to get up in the morning.
I have ADHD and extreme sleep problems that started when I was in 5th Grade (I’m now 40). I have experimented with tons of strategies. I am now working graves, and I am so much more alert and happier and healthier. However, I tried to have a consistent weekly schedule, and that didn’t work. I work 3 days per week (yes, I’m struggling to pay food, rent, etc). My first day after work I let myself sleep as long as I want. I usually am awake about 4 hours. Then I swap to being awake for the next day. Then I transfer back to being awake at nights. I know this isn’t perfect, but I have proven to myself one key point - I do not have a 24 hour clock, and trying to force myself to have one artificially kills me. I can do it for short periods, but only if I give myself a recovery day to do things like sleep in. For years, everyone tried to convince me what I needed was a consistent routine that I carry through to weekends. I have never been more sick or tired or miserable than when I actually followed through for long periods of getting up at the exact same time every day including weekends. I’m sure a routine works quite well for a lot of people, but if you have tried it and it seems to make your sleep problems worse maybe consider listening to your body and do the opposite. If you have to be consistent Mon-Fri, then purposely sleep in and take naps on Saturday, and then stay up Saturday night a bit and cycle back to mornings midday on Sunday and see if it helps.
Hello Doctor. Thank you very much for your work in generall and your recent videos. I really needed the "myth-busting" of Internet personalities or Neurodiversity. I have often a hard time to tell what is science based advice and what is just an opinion. Have a nice day.
Well, where do you think people get ideas of what to research? I actually like to hear from layman who have tried different things that have worked for them. We’re all just experimenting to see what works best for our particular situation.
Hello Dr. Thank you so keeping your lectures and videos online. It has given me little clarity on my condition.i was diagnosed with ADHD 2 years ago and have been under medication since. Im 32 yrs old and struggling with my daily task. While it has improved alot, motivation to finish important work task is still a major challenge. Currently my husband helps me by holding me accountable to my actions but that only stays for few minutes and I forget the incident after everything is fine. Currently im taking attendate 20 sr with neurocetapam 800. But im not if it is helpful
I'm so sorry, I know what that's like - same issues. It's kind of comforting to know I'm not alone but I wish there was so much more research and help for this.
65 yo make. ADHD and delayed sleep phase. Started Ritalin (Concerta) 8 years ago (though diagnosed in the 1960’s) and have found it definitely aids in sleep onset. Also, holding to a strict bedtime routine has helped. Surprisingly, trying to go to sleep early than usual can end up keeping me awake for hours after my usual onset.
i love your talks, old and new they are all gold! you are a gift to this world lol. your depth of understanding of ADD is imo unparalleled and your input into the field is invaluable. thank you for helping me to understand myself in a way no psych ever has (not even the expert who diagnosed me) :)
I wish I could get back on days, I was so much better about routine. Up at 4 out the door at 5 start work at 6, back home at 4, dinner by 7, daily workout at 8 and in bed by nine with some hour long lecture type video playing to fall asleep to. Honestly the hardest part was finding an interesting video I hadn't put on before, if it doesn't draw my attention enough it'll just keep me up 😅
Thank you for this. I usually sleep with only the AC on but I want to try with some soft music. My brain is always running 24/7 and maybe the music can help.
I find what works really good for me is storytelling on down low with the screen off to fall asleep, personally music is too stimulating and in particular “creepy” stories tend to have a very light and monotone atmosphere that makes it super easy to just fall asleep to.
Yeah the music did not work for me. I notice what kinda helps me is reading the tv with the tv with no audio. Just reading the subtitles to one of my favortie shows. It shows my brain from thinking whatever thoughts I have and it just reads. I get tired and close my eyes and then its easier to sleep. @@tylerdavis3
Wondering if other ADHDers also experience vivid dreams. I want to do a sleep study because it is bothering me (I feel tired after waking up and waking up itself is hard because my dreams are so active, my mind wants to return to it). It began before I started taking stimulants (currently I combine non-stimulants (morning) with stimulants (later in the day, short-term effect)).
I told my doctor the same thing in our last appointment! I often wake up tired in the morning because I remember all the dreams I had that night, and it's never just one, but 4 or 5 different "storylines" in rapid succession.
For adults, don’t make my mistake of having a work computer in your bedroom… I had to sleep on the couch for a while because that room became associated with stress and thinking about work 😂 Also, if you can create a sleep routine (make it simple, use Brili app or similar), use the routine at whatever late point at night you normally go to bed. Over time, you can use this routine earlier in the night and your body will be trained to recognize that it’s bedtime and you can go to bed earlier… (just personal advice, idk if there’s any studies) I wish this video talked more about adults … was watching this for myself…
Thank you so much Dr for your invaluable contributions! I read an article that many of the currently marketed melatonin supplements have higher/different doses than actually advertised (the non-pharmaceutical products), though there are some prescription melatonin that come as melatonin 2mg extended-release tablets (in my country), and 3mg tablets. Does the study you cite use any of these concentrations? Does melatonin also help to prevent the child from awakening during the night or only for sleeping onset? What does "bright light therapy" mean? Thank you so much in advance!
Thank you for your informative lecture. I am diagnosed Adhd Inattentive subtype from the mid 80's. I have extremely difficult sleep issues. Have you done much research into Delayed Sleep Phase Disorder? I cannot fall asleep until 4am, the earliest & cannot wake up until typically 12 or more hours later. My sleep issues have progressivley worsened over the years & I'm now 44. I also have many other medical issues involving hypermobililty, scoliosis, Auditory Processing Disorder, GI issues... & much more. I was given methylphenidate as a child & took it again in college. Again, my general question is as to whether you've researched much on Delayed Sleep Phase Disorder. I am on medication to get me to sleep & to stay asleep but I cannot manage to fall asleep earlier, even with medication.
18:15 for sleep suggestions. I can add a few more: ▫️Drink warm water before bedtime ▫️Avoid internal stimulus - especially horny thoughts ▫️Sleep with comfortable clothes and use a blanket suitable for the season (thin for summer & thick for winter) ▫️Get a massage once in a while to remove muscular tension. Stretch in late evenings for the same You don't have to do all of them. That would be a burden. Perhaps just a few would work. Sometimes we naturally get good sleep without trying, sometimes it's just impossible.
I have a adhd 6 year old. I have tried all of these suggestions, except medication. Nothing works after a few nights. Once the novelty has worn off, we are back to square one. She is in and out of bed like a yoyo until about 10pm and then often wakes about 3am.
Warm bath before bedtime. Make you bedroom dark absolutely 0 lights. Meditate into sleep. Remember u have adhd u love to sleep 😴 💤 🛏 We are lazy we love to sleep. Remember bedtime is not the time to think, its time to sleep. Ur getting tired now really tired close your eyes, stop thinking.
I'm an autistic and ADHD adult. I've always had problems with sleep, even since I was a kid. I never got diagnosed as a kid so my issues were never attributed to me being neurodivergent. Only now that I am an adult I am learning that it wasn't my fault.
Thank You Doctor! I tried to find a video on your channel about neurofeedback for adhd, as well as the different types. With all the claims out there, it would be great to hear your thoughts and research review.
I've found using an app called Sleep Town has given me enough of a push to regularise my bedtime and eliminate phone use once in bed. I've also tried cutting out coffee after lunchtime.
Me watching this at midnight after sleeping for max 2 hours 2 nights. I just can’t relax and now I got anxiety because I don’t know if I will have a good night 😢 So frustrating.
Me too! It got bad recently, and anxiety kicks in and turns into a recurring pattern. I hope you find some rest. Might be worth talking to a doctor about medication to help you catch up on sleep when you've had too many sleepless nights in a row. All the best to you friend xo
I am speculating that the delayed rhythm might have been evolutionary selected for. It could have helped the person's - and the tribe's - survival if they had people who were alert when the morning larks were getting tired.
Eating oatmeal at night helps knock me out. If helps best late in the day but has an effect earlier too. But I stopped having it at breakfast. It puts me down like nothing else.
It can be an absolute quagmire of a bottomless pit, the seeking of a good night's sleep. There is the paradox of the more the problem the more we try and fix it, the more we try and fix it the worse it becomes and the worse it becomes the more we think about it, and for an ADHD sufferer this is hard, since it is the thinking thinking thinking that is one of the fundamental problems with ADHD. One further suggestion I have is a standard CBT method of Thought Challenging, generally used to dismiss bad thoughts, but I have and do use it for this purpose, the challenge not being an unhelpful thought, but unhelpful overthinking. I was sleeping extremely well, I'm taking amitriptyline for my CFS which did wonders for my terrible insomnia, however since recently changing my diet, my slight tiredness that was part of my CFS has gone, however since I'm so much more energetic than I was, I'm now struggling to fall asleep, my clock has been disrupted, it will take time to readjust, but I try my best not to think too much, I'm self employed, my time is my own, so I generally don't have to be anywhere at anytime which is a help.
I think you answered your own question. Managed adhd doesn’t mess up your sleep, unmanaged does. The impact of unmanaged adhd is more sleep disruptive than the stimulant effect of medication.
Yes I'm tempted to take tiny dose of stimulant next time I'm lying awake ruminating, and just see what happens. I'm not sure what it will do though - I'm just as likely to then want to get up and follow through on some of the thoughts and ideas whirring around!
When you're interested in everything, sleep can feel like a punishment. I'm at my most alert between 5am and 12pm. I love early mornings. If anything, stims improved my sleep. Or at least didn't make it worse. I find it crazy that some people sleep in till 12pm. That sounds like torture.
I tried Dissolvable Melatonin and it Only worked to Get me asleep Faster; It did not help me Stay asleep for 7 to 9 hours. What Does Help Me Both Fall Asleep Fast and Get 7 to 9 Hours of Sleep is My Weighted Blanket (Sometimes I get A Little More than 9 Hours of Sleep).
Thank you for mentioning! Same response here to melatonin pills. I have heard about slow release ones though which could be worth a try if they deliver the melatonin for a longer time. But I LOVE heavy quilts on me, so I'll consider saving for a weighted blanket!
So, out of curiosity, does a LONGER sleep time stem from ADHD? When I was a teenager, I used to have to sleep 10 hours a night to really feel rested. No stem use at that time. Could this be ADHD related?
Sleep is a huge issue for many kids with ADHD & ASD. Every parent FB group I’m on has numerous posts on how to get their kid to sleep. I’ve noticed that catapress and melatonin are the only drugs recommended by doctors.
I also find none of it works for me. And honestly, over the years, none of the insomnia advice has really helped. I wish I had some suggestions, but I only have commiseration
I “suck” glutathione that has been suspended in liposomes. 2ml - 4ml is enough for some to cross the blood brain barrier. It has a wonderful effect on REM sleep - the sleep that you get in the early morning when you have imaginative dreams. Don’t buy the cheapest brand. Please post if you have a good response.
😂OMG at point 7:45 : Younger children may rise earlier....when undiagnosed son was 4 he'd awake very very early, drag a chair to the front door, unlock the deadbolt, walk down the block, 3 houses, and awken his babysitters family! That was 30 years ago. Today we'd likely be arrested for ' child endagerment' Fortunately it was a very safe neighborhood.
The things that are supposed to calm down a child for bedtime as had the opposite affect ( bathtime, book read ) So I'm at a loss. My one child seems to be a night owl, how do I change that to a better sleep?
I've been struggling with sleep for decades, from childhood to adulthood, and all I can say is for some of us, it's just really tough. I've tried so many different things, but honestly, most don't work, some work sometimes, and none work consistently. I personally find reading too stimulating, so I can't read before bed and expect to go to sleep, or even expect to be able to stop reading unless I reach the end of the book I am not a night owl and in fact prefer to be awake early, but I am extremely sensitive to noise and light in my environment, and so as child I would stay awake and be unable to sleep if other people were awake and walking around. I could even hear quiet conversations from across the house. As an adult, I have to sleep with earplugs, but it doesn't fix it entirely Its possible your child has additional things that are causing them to be unable to relax and fall asleep. If they're old enough to speak, I would ask them to tell you about what it's like for them to go sleep, and see if you can work out what's getting in the way. However, if they really are a natural night owl, and have a delayed circadian rhythm, your doctor is a better resource than trying to overcome that on your own
I take vyvanse, but I also need vitamin b supplements . I am told that you can't take these together, so I usually take my vitamin b early in the morning and my meds 2hrs later. because of this, I often don't have time for my vitamins, and they are skipped. I don't think waking up for 2 min and then going back to bed is the answer as I sometimes sleep through that early morning alarm. Any advice is appreciated!!
12:16 Where do i find out more about this "ADHD medication delivery system/ stimulant delivery system jordan apm" I have adult ADHD and take elvanse/vylvanse. I would rather take it before going to bed so it doesnt interfer with my sleep issues. Does it only work with methylphenidate?
I feel that adderall xr, makes my child stay up longer and have a hard time falling asleep, than my adderall regular (not xr) does for me. Why do doctors keep giving kids the XR?
Ambien has a high likelihood of becoming dependent and tolerance raises very quickly. None of the gabaergic drugs should be used for long periods of time.
@@tylerdavis3 Should, shouldn't. Why? Also, tolerance / dependence is taking us a bit off track (assume a perfect situation where it doesn't--and also zolpidem is ok re. that).
@@---Ben---if you're over the age of 50 then go for it! Lack of sleep can cause stroke the older you are. I dunno maybe I'm wrong but that's just how I see it
Hey, life long insomniac with adhd, just throwing this out there as it might help someone else with similar issues. can't say why but 🍒💓Quetiapine🍒 before bed completly changed my life and sleep for the better.
I fully appreciate the pajama party theme for this video!
Right? Who among us wouldn’t love to attend an exclusive pyjama party with Russ, The Moose and a roomful of quirky fellow ADHDers?
So funny!
Me too! Let's enjoy life a bit.
I'm watching this in my pajamas and I'm sure I'm not the only one. So that makes it definitely a party
The suggestion about going from a lit environment to a dark bedroom and the abrupt change in stimulantion caught my attention. No matter how tired i may be, as soon as i turn out the light, I'm wide awake and it takes at least an hour to fall asleep. Occasionally I've tried leaving on a salt lamp that gives off a warm glow. I'll try doing that more often and see if it helps.
So many of my ADHD adult clients have a delayed sleep phase. I've had some really good results pulling the sleep phase earlier with use of light and dark exposure and melatonin six hours before sleep onset. Light wearables like glasses and visors are so convenient to use for morning light exposure. I've had a client move from a sleep onset of 3am to around 11:30pm. It's made a great change to their life, and now with the knowledge of how to shift their circadian rhythm, they are more able to get up for work and are significantly less sleep deprived. I see this as an area where education and treatment need to be widely disseminated.
Could you tell me what you mean by glasses and visors in the morning?
@@ritasjourney light exposure glasses or visors, such as Propeaq, Re-Timer, AYO, or Luminette 3. 30 minutes mid morning. Light exposure is an evidence based treatment for circadian rhythm sleep disorders and depression.
I'm not diagnosed with anything, but I've had delayed sleep phase. 2-3am was my natural rhythm, in stressful periods it could be delayed as far back as 6-7am.
When it came to that, I had great success resetting it by just staying awake for a day, and collapsing around 9-10pm, eventually stabilizing around midnight.
Then I saw some Huberman stuff, and started getting sun exposure as soon as I'd wake up. After 3 days, I had no trouble staying in the 10pm-1am zone for weeks. Better quality as well.
Also, if I woke up earlier than I was supposed to to go to the toilet, I'd use prop welding goggles (bc i couldn't make the hallway and the toilet dark), so I don't get light exposure so I could get back to sleep for those 3-4 needed hours.
Later I tried all that with melatonin, and my sleep quality increased significantly.
Thank for you for information. I have been taking 3-6mg of melatonin approx 2 hours before bedtime. I go to bed between 11pm-12am however I consistently wake up every 2 or 3 hours. I regularly find it hard to fall back asleep.
Do you think taking melatonin earlier in the day would help? Any other tips that may help me to sleep without waking up regularly?
@@emmetw Sleep behaviour is complex and is dependent on a lot of factors. Working out what's happening with your sleep would require a proper assessment with someone who knows what they are doing (not someone who just hands out a sheet of sleep hygiene practices). If you can, I would suggest finding a health practitioner with specialises in sleep to have a proper look at the whole picture, since treatment recommendations really have to be evidence-based and focused on the specific issues.
I’m so pleased you are still active in ADHD research and are offering UA-cam videos to the public. As a female who was diagnosed in middle age (~35 yo; I’m now 55), your work has helped explain SO much-a million thanks!
Question: would you consider paper-format books “media”? Podcasts? Music? There are so many forms of media, that it’s hard to know what you mean.
Blessings to you!
He mentions listening to soft music towards the end of the video
Why isn't the link between sleep disorders and ADHD talked about MORE? I've know about ADHD for decades but this is the FIRST I'm hearing sleep disorders can exacerbate ADHD. Thank you for this info. Sleep studies for all ADHDers!
Wow, this whole video hits home. Everything hits so hard explaining my childhood bedtime that I typed out a novel. Went and saved that in my notes and posted this instead. But, I will share, I did well in school but could never get homework done, or pay close attention in class. I was an oddity to the principal, multiple whacks a day and still would let homework go undone. I’d do well on tests though, but principal had teachers watch me during class to see what I was doing with my time. I had the feelings I was being watched, too, but the consensus was that if I only applied myself I could do something. These squirrels in the head bite sometimes, but I’m doing something worthwhile in spite of them. 😂 🐿️
You are a gift to the world with both a sense of humor and such a deep clinical, thoroughly researched and compassionate dedication to those of us who truly suffer with ADHD and it many complexities. Thank you for your ongoing work, your books, your videos and your good will. You are greatly needed and appreciated.
Honestly I experienced the first time after 38 years going to bed without needing a audio book and getting up without using the snooze button 3 times after getting an ADHD diagnose in the age of 45 and started taking a stimulant (Elvanse). Also I feel now awake during the day and I reduced coffin consume from 5 big cups to zero without missing anything.
I'm happy but also angry that I did not discover this earlier and thought that life must be that hard and now discovered that it isn't for most of the people and that it doesn't need to be that hard for me either.
Dr. B! You’re on 🔥, sir… so many helpful videos in such quick succession! And you know that ADHD folk tend to not stand on ceremony; we are honoured to hang out with you as you chill in your bathrobe. ☺ Also delighted to watch your subscriber numbers slowly but steadily climb; this is an invaluable gift that you are providing for all of us and I sincerely hope that people around the world will watch, learn and pass it along. Well done!
I had neither anxiety nor defiance but always issues with sleep as I felt alert, at my most insightful, interested and creative in the evening. Sleep clinics announced I had “delayed onset sleep”… which was no help whatsoever. Diagnosed with ADHD in middle age, I finally understood why. Now I find that comfy headphones , listening to a calm, soothing book or podcast (much more than music) can help me fall asleep. I force myself to lie still as if I toss and turn too much, I’ll miss what the narrator is saying. Focusing on the words of another means that my own brain whirs less, and off to The Land of Nod I gently trudge.
I suffered lifelong anxiety (until medicated properly) that expressed itself as a deep, restless boredom when I was young. “Only boring people get bored,” my mother would tell me, endlessly.
I sure showed HER who was “boring”… 😂🤦♀️
I am one of those 20% whose sleep regulation has improved since stimulant medication. I think it's because it's helps me self-regulate during the day and so night time is less chaotic.
In childhood i had all that problems (have been sleeping with light, etc.). And almost all of my life i was afraid of going to bed. Now i can`t sleep well unless i`ve moved aprox. 4 hours on foot and/or cycling. (Yeah, i`ve been drinking before, but it doesn`t help the long run:).
I when I was in the elementary school I used to wake up at5 am, prepare my homework and study. I am devastated now after a lifelong struggle not knowning what was wrong with me. Too late now to know that I had and have ADHD. Thanks for the video.
It is hard to process the late discovery that there really was something different. We struggled for so long against a strong, invisible current which nobody else seemed to experience. I'm glad you've found out now, and I hope things can get a little easier for you in future. You're not alone. Take care.
2:10 im very very glad to know that im not the only person who has adhd and struggles with anxiety, i have social anxiety, i hate adhd and social anxiety so much, i feel nervous going outside. Thanks for these videos👍
I found that walking six to seven thousand steps a day makes it easier to fall asleep. Before this I exercised for 45 minutes a day, but being active throughout the day was more helpful. Even walking half an hour to an hour, a few hours before bed makes it easier to sleep.
Thank you for taking time to make these videos doctor!
I relate to this a lot as an adult. Due to family dysfunction as a child, I was responsible for my own bedtime from the time I was ten. At the worst, I would be up until 1am doing homework (went to a private school) and rarely got enough sleep. I had insomnia in college. I got meds for it. I started staying up late to write after I graduated. Since I’ve struggled to find a job, that has continued to the detriment of my social life.
Excellent and very informal video. But the *only* reason you could come up with, as to why ADHD kids have more screen time, is "Parents are using it as a babysitter".
Seriously? That is literally so boomer, and very unprofessional.
I am the one with ADHD, not my kid. But I know for me, I use screens for much more than to just occupy myself:
- Learning stuff. I have so many interests, and am always on the hunt for new things to learn.
- Providing background so I can focus.
- Keeping me awake when intrusive sleep risks making me fall asleep during the day.
- Social interactions which nowadays is a lot online, and even more for my kid.
- Unwinding when I am too tired to do anything, but doing very relaxing activites makes me feel on edge, because they are *too* calm.
I felt the same way about this, but I am a boomer with screens in my bedroom to try and fall asleep or trying to re-fall asleep every night around 3-4 am. A podcast with a timer is most helpful, although I sometimes wake up when the podcast has stopped playing and my mind starts overthinking again.
Thanks for the topic🙏🏻 it’s extremely important I believe. I was diagnosed with generalised anxiety disorder for years, complex cptsd, and since 2016 started to struggle with severe sleep problems. And this year I was finally diagnosed with ADHD (I’m 43), which explained all. It was blessing🙏🏻… Long story short, I know that for me (adhd combination type), having comorbidity such as GAD, it’s so so much more difficult to manage sleepless nights. Sleep problems became my trauma really. And every time I have bad night sleep, it triggers the hole mechanism of anxiety, which triggers sleep problems, and my ADHD plays a crucial role for both, and creates a vicious circle🤪 (I of course, did years of huge psychotherapy work, good diet, supplements, exercises, which was and is great! But didn’t do much for sleep. And I’ve tried many sleep strategies that actually made me worse. Things like CBTI, sleep hygiene, meditation, etc. And the more work around sleep the worse outcomes, and more anxiety. What helped? antidepressant medications really)… But now when I know my brain better and I accept my differences, is definitely a relief. However, it’s hard to find a resources on the topic, so video like this is definitely helpful. But still I would love to hear or read something specific related to adhd and sleeplessness anxiety🙏🏻
I have the same issue with a vicious cycle of sleep anxiety, triggered by a bad night and then spiralling for months of insomnia. It IS traumatic! The more 'therapy' I'm pointed towards, the more stressful sleep becomes!
It's reassuring to see a professional endorse the all nighter reset approach. I think many of us have done it at least once.
If using this method, take serious precautions regarding driving, heavy machinery, etc. ADHD itself is a risk factor, and add sleep deprivation and any stimulant medication 'crash' and those are concurrent risk factors. I hurt myself pretty badly due to sheer unconscious clumsiness during this type of scenario.
Ironically, reading is a very stimulating activity for me. I used to stay up all night reading novels as a kid, and my mom would check on me to make sure my light was off and I was actually asleep, but I would just hide the book under my pillow and hide the reading lamp as well. It's a terrible activity for me to do to wind down before bed, because I will more likely stay up if I read
My trick is reading non fiction books on topics I find interesting in itself but may be somewhat dry, not too exciting to keep me awake yet interesting. Books that have worked for me are in the range of Sapiens and How To Change Your Mind
@@ingagud Yeah, that doesn't work normally for me. I just love reading too much
Same. Kid with a flashlight under the covers with a comic book.
Thank you so much for putting these talks out for free! They help me and my family so much.
Having experienced sleep issues for as long as I can remember, the problem I always experience is my brain not shutting down. The over-thinking is horrible and the quieter it is the worse it is to fall asleep, over-thinking can be something like just going over the days events in my head, rehearsing stupid useless conversations that will never happen, thinking about what I am going to do the next day, sudden flashes of insight into something, while useful later NOT helpful when trying to fall asleep, ear worms and not just snippets of songs but phrases, words or names repeated ad nauseam until I want to bash my head against the wall to get it to stop, for that last one the only solution I have found is to listen to music, loud enough to hear the words clearly but not loud enough to keep me awake, for the rest white noise something as simple as a fan running.
My experience is so similar to yours. The random phrases, repetitive brain chatter, and oh God the earworms! Drives me mental. I might try your approach, thanks for sharing.
My flashes of insight are often so useful and I'm like, 'seriously, RIGHT NOW you had to have this realization, that you're now compelled to go write it down, because you'll forget it tomorrow? Srsly brain?!'
Yes. The earworms and inane repetitions. So much yes.
I go thru the same things plus the sudden burst of energy around bedtime and the need to clean and organize the most random things
Have you tried melatonin? It helps to fall asleep
I wonder if some of these studies controlled for chronic stress and depression. It's hard for me to imagine chronic stress from ADHD not playing a part in everything I do, and I know that the worse my stress and anxiety are, the worse my sleep is. If I were trying to identify a mechanism, that would be a big one for me.
Thank you so much Doctor Russell. You are a blessing to this syndrome that sometimes or on daily bases its a really nightmare. Its much apreciate it by me all your videos and research. God bless you.
I have found putting on familiar audio books to help a lot. They can’t have loud sound effects or anything that can startle, and I have to have finished the book before so that I don’t stay awake to not miss the story. Then I put them on a 3 hour timer and have them read me to sleep :)
I've learned that "Brown Noise" and "Pink Noise" are much better than "White Noise" for those of us with ADHD.
(Brown Noise is best)
Thanks for the tip - looking this up now.
14:00 Gotta push back on this a bit. I take Atomoxetine which has been a game changer for brain fog, focus, motivation, emotional regulation, anxiety and general outlook on life. HOWEVER it has made my insomnia much worse. It is extremely difficult to fall asleep without the aid of Gabapentin which still does not work half the time and I wake many times throughout the night and get a "full" nights sleep about 2 nights a week. I was off of it recently and was able to sleep through the night more easily but this came with a cost of the return of the worst of my ADHD symptoms mainly horrible brain fog. Watching this and other videos in hope of finding a solution.
Good topic. I always end up with biphasic sleep.
I think your med recomendations for different situations was very helpful and the no electronics an hour or so before bed REALISTIC. I have noticed lately issues with waking quite early and my mind beginning to race and i end up being up for an hour. I wake up tired. I was diagnosed with ADHD last month and im still figuring it out.
In an ideal world for people with delayed sleep onset I’d say get an outside job that starts early in the morning. I work seasonally and I’m awake at 5:30am and in the sun by 6:30am until 1-4pm most days. I can fall asleep like a baby by 9-10pm most days.
However the moment we stop working I go back to my normal horrendous sleep schedule no matter how hard I try to force myself to get up in the morning.
I need to link your videos to all my adhd friends and also watch them all myself, these are so informative and helpful, thank you.
My seven year old has sleeping problems (we are a very close and happy family.)Listening to it. I can relate so much. Thank you so much
Finally got my home sleep study last night, and I'm hoping to get a lab study and get this treated soon!
I love that you never say "um". Thank you!
I have ADHD and extreme sleep problems that started when I was in 5th Grade (I’m now 40).
I have experimented with tons of strategies. I am now working graves, and I am so much more alert and happier and healthier. However, I tried to have a consistent weekly schedule, and that didn’t work. I work 3 days per week (yes, I’m struggling to pay food, rent, etc). My first day after work I let myself sleep as long as I want. I usually am awake about 4 hours. Then I swap to being awake for the next day. Then I transfer back to being awake at nights.
I know this isn’t perfect, but I have proven to myself one key point - I do not have a 24 hour clock, and trying to force myself to have one artificially kills me. I can do it for short periods, but only if I give myself a recovery day to do things like sleep in. For years, everyone tried to convince me what I needed was a consistent routine that I carry through to weekends. I have never been more sick or tired or miserable than when I actually followed through for long periods of getting up at the exact same time every day including weekends.
I’m sure a routine works quite well for a lot of people, but if you have tried it and it seems to make your sleep problems worse maybe consider listening to your body and do the opposite. If you have to be consistent Mon-Fri, then purposely sleep in and take naps on Saturday, and then stay up Saturday night a bit and cycle back to mornings midday on Sunday and see if it helps.
I can relate 100%
Listen to something very boring conversations etc. I t works.
Hello Doctor. Thank you very much for your work in generall and your recent videos. I really needed the "myth-busting" of Internet personalities or Neurodiversity. I have often a hard time to tell what is science based advice and what is just an opinion. Have a nice day.
Well, where do you think people get ideas of what to research? I actually like to hear from layman who have tried different things that have worked for them. We’re all just experimenting to see what works best for our particular situation.
Hello Dr. Thank you so keeping your lectures and videos online. It has given me little clarity on my condition.i was diagnosed with ADHD 2 years ago and have been under medication since. Im 32 yrs old and struggling with my daily task. While it has improved alot, motivation to finish important work task is still a major challenge. Currently my husband helps me by holding me accountable to my actions but that only stays for few minutes and I forget the incident after everything is fine. Currently im taking attendate 20 sr with neurocetapam 800. But im not if it is helpful
Please talk with Huberman on how to thrive with adhd
In caveman days us AdHD’s folks were the night watchmen, were security, the fire keepers, and the midnight newborn baby rockers.
Also during hunter/gatherer era … we were hunters ❤we have strengths too 😢
@@TheKandiqurl yes, because we are super hyper aware of our surroundings because we focus not just one thing but on EVERYTHING!
Great bathrobe!
Oh yeah, and great content too. So delighted you have a channel 😊
Thank you so much for your videos and your work on Adhd. So helpful, so life changing. Thank you again.
Thanks for this very informative video. Would you consider to talk about ADHD & Memory as well in a future video?
Yes please. Looking for solutions.
I'd like that too. My memory is & always has been the proverbial sieve. My mother used to say: " You'd forget your head if it wasn't screwed on!"
Reading puts me to sleep but when I stop my mind just fires back up again.
I'm so sorry, I know what that's like - same issues. It's kind of comforting to know I'm not alone but I wish there was so much more research and help for this.
65 yo make. ADHD and delayed sleep phase. Started Ritalin (Concerta) 8 years ago (though diagnosed in the 1960’s) and have found it definitely aids in sleep onset. Also, holding to a strict bedtime routine has helped. Surprisingly, trying to go to sleep early than usual can end up keeping me awake for hours after my usual onset.
I'm watching this at 1am 😅
Lol I’m watching it at 3:40am 😂😂😂
I watched at 6am after 2 hours of dodgy sleep, it's nice to know we're not alone but I'm sorry we're all suffering 😅
I'm watching at 2.30am to try and get an idea why I'm not asleep again
4:01 😢
same lol
i love your talks, old and new they are all gold! you are a gift to this world lol. your depth of understanding of ADD is imo unparalleled and your input into the field is invaluable. thank you for helping me to understand myself in a way no psych ever has (not even the expert who diagnosed me) :)
Thanks for all the very informative videos doctor Russ.
I listened to this and fell asleep 😂, how ironic! No meds today though, but great content - thank you 👍
This was extremely helpful, thank you.
I appreciate you soooo much!! Thank you Dr Barkley
I wish I could get back on days, I was so much better about routine. Up at 4 out the door at 5 start work at 6, back home at 4, dinner by 7, daily workout at 8 and in bed by nine with some hour long lecture type video playing to fall asleep to. Honestly the hardest part was finding an interesting video I hadn't put on before, if it doesn't draw my attention enough it'll just keep me up 😅
Thank you for this. I usually sleep with only the AC on but I want to try with some soft music. My brain is always running 24/7 and maybe the music can help.
Also biernal beats...
I find what works really good for me is storytelling on down low with the screen off to fall asleep, personally music is too stimulating and in particular “creepy” stories tend to have a very light and monotone atmosphere that makes it super easy to just fall asleep to.
Yeah the music did not work for me. I notice what kinda helps me is reading the tv with the tv with no audio. Just reading the subtitles to one of my favortie shows. It shows my brain from thinking whatever thoughts I have and it just reads. I get tired and close my eyes and then its easier to sleep.
@@tylerdavis3
Wondering if other ADHDers also experience vivid dreams. I want to do a sleep study because it is bothering me (I feel tired after waking up and waking up itself is hard because my dreams are so active, my mind wants to return to it). It began before I started taking stimulants (currently I combine non-stimulants (morning) with stimulants (later in the day, short-term effect)).
I told my doctor the same thing in our last appointment! I often wake up tired in the morning because I remember all the dreams I had that night, and it's never just one, but 4 or 5 different "storylines" in rapid succession.
I experience that as well. Sometimes I experience entire movies from
Start to finish in my dreams.
Do either of you happen to be writers?
@@nicolemccray8095 no, i am a dancer and i study business.
My dreams are incredibly vivid and complex. I have severe sleep inertia which, for me, seems unrelated.
For adults, don’t make my mistake of having a work computer in your bedroom… I had to sleep on the couch for a while because that room became associated with stress and thinking about work 😂
Also, if you can create a sleep routine (make it simple, use Brili app or similar), use the routine at whatever late point at night you normally go to bed. Over time, you can use this routine earlier in the night and your body will be trained to recognize that it’s bedtime and you can go to bed earlier… (just personal advice, idk if there’s any studies)
I wish this video talked more about adults … was watching this for myself…
It’s like literally fight sleep even when I want/need it… And I’m 42 years old!!! 🙄
Thank you so much Dr for your invaluable contributions! I read an article that many of the currently marketed melatonin supplements have higher/different doses than actually advertised (the non-pharmaceutical products), though there are some prescription melatonin that come as melatonin 2mg extended-release tablets (in my country), and 3mg tablets. Does the study you cite use any of these concentrations? Does melatonin also help to prevent the child from awakening during the night or only for sleeping onset? What does "bright light therapy" mean? Thank you so much in advance!
Thank you for your informative lecture. I am diagnosed Adhd Inattentive subtype from the mid 80's. I have extremely difficult sleep issues. Have you done much research into Delayed Sleep Phase Disorder? I cannot fall asleep until 4am, the earliest & cannot wake up until typically 12 or more hours later. My sleep issues have progressivley worsened over the years & I'm now 44. I also have many other medical issues involving hypermobililty, scoliosis, Auditory Processing Disorder, GI issues... & much more. I was given methylphenidate as a child & took it again in college. Again, my general question is as to whether you've researched much on Delayed Sleep Phase Disorder. I am on medication to get me to sleep & to stay asleep but I cannot manage to fall asleep earlier, even with medication.
18:15 for sleep suggestions. I can add a few more:
▫️Drink warm water before bedtime
▫️Avoid internal stimulus - especially horny thoughts
▫️Sleep with comfortable clothes and use a blanket suitable for the season (thin for summer & thick for winter)
▫️Get a massage once in a while to remove muscular tension. Stretch in late evenings for the same
You don't have to do all of them. That would be a burden. Perhaps just a few would work. Sometimes we naturally get good sleep without trying, sometimes it's just impossible.
I have a adhd 6 year old. I have tried all of these suggestions, except medication. Nothing works after a few nights. Once the novelty has worn off, we are back to square one. She is in and out of bed like a yoyo until about 10pm and then often wakes about 3am.
Warm bath before bedtime.
Make you bedroom dark absolutely 0 lights.
Meditate into sleep.
Remember u have adhd u love to sleep 😴 💤 🛏
We are lazy we love to sleep.
Remember bedtime is not the time to think, its time to sleep.
Ur getting tired now really tired close your eyes, stop thinking.
I'm an autistic and ADHD adult. I've always had problems with sleep, even since I was a kid. I never got diagnosed as a kid so my issues were never attributed to me being neurodivergent. Only now that I am an adult I am learning that it wasn't my fault.
Thank You Doctor! I tried to find a video on your channel about neurofeedback for adhd, as well as the different types. With all the claims out there, it would be great to hear your thoughts and research review.
It’s on my list to do. I do mention it in the ADHD overview in the last section on disproven treatments but not in any real detail. Thanks!
I've found using an app called Sleep Town has given me enough of a push to regularise my bedtime and eliminate phone use once in bed. I've also tried cutting out coffee after lunchtime.
Me watching this at midnight after sleeping for max 2 hours 2 nights. I just can’t relax and now I got anxiety because I don’t know if I will have a good night 😢 So frustrating.
Me too! It got bad recently, and anxiety kicks in and turns into a recurring pattern. I hope you find some rest. Might be worth talking to a doctor about medication to help you catch up on sleep when you've had too many sleepless nights in a row. All the best to you friend xo
Listen to boring conversations on yt, something very boring.
Thank you
I am speculating that the delayed rhythm might have been evolutionary selected for. It could have helped the person's - and the tribe's - survival if they had people who were alert when the morning larks were getting tired.
😂then that would be me
We stan Dr. B!
Russ Barkley in a bathrobe because all heroes do not wear capes. 👊🏼💯
Eating oatmeal at night helps knock me out. If helps best late in the day but has an effect earlier too. But I stopped having it at breakfast. It puts me down like nothing else.
It can be an absolute quagmire of a bottomless pit, the seeking of a good night's sleep. There is the paradox of the more the problem the more we try and fix it, the more we try and fix it the worse it becomes and the worse it becomes the more we think about it, and for an ADHD sufferer this is hard, since it is the thinking thinking thinking that is one of the fundamental problems with ADHD.
One further suggestion I have is a standard CBT method of Thought Challenging, generally used to dismiss bad thoughts, but I have and do use it for this purpose, the challenge not being an unhelpful thought, but unhelpful overthinking.
I was sleeping extremely well, I'm taking amitriptyline for my CFS which did wonders for my terrible insomnia, however since recently changing my diet, my slight tiredness that was part of my CFS has gone, however since I'm so much more energetic than I was, I'm now struggling to fall asleep, my clock has been disrupted, it will take time to readjust, but I try my best not to think too much, I'm self employed, my time is my own, so I generally don't have to be anywhere at anytime which is a help.
I’m watching this at 2am
I’m watching this in the afternoon… but instead of packing for an important trip: departure at crack of dawn, tomorrow. 😹
😂 me toooooo
Stellar! Thanks !
What I don’t understand is how I can take a nap when my stimulant is active but when it wears off my adhd ramps up and I can’t fall asleep.
I think you answered your own question.
Managed adhd doesn’t mess up your sleep, unmanaged does.
The impact of unmanaged adhd is more sleep disruptive than the stimulant effect of medication.
Yes I'm tempted to take tiny dose of stimulant next time I'm lying awake ruminating, and just see what happens. I'm not sure what it will do though - I'm just as likely to then want to get up and follow through on some of the thoughts and ideas whirring around!
Thanks🙏
a very *very* fun thing is when you have adhd and work a retail schedule for 10 years. literally unable to create or maintain a stable sleep cycle.
When you're interested in everything, sleep can feel like a punishment. I'm at my most alert between 5am and 12pm. I love early mornings. If anything, stims improved my sleep. Or at least didn't make it worse. I find it crazy that some people sleep in till 12pm. That sounds like torture.
2:45 seconds. asked my manager if i can work a saturday shift. just finihsed dancing now starting this vid! screamin! its 1:28am!
Brilliant thanks 😊
I tried Dissolvable Melatonin and it Only worked to Get me asleep Faster; It did not help me Stay asleep for 7 to 9 hours.
What Does Help Me Both Fall Asleep Fast and Get 7 to 9 Hours of Sleep is My Weighted Blanket (Sometimes I get A Little More than 9 Hours of Sleep).
Thank you for mentioning! Same response here to melatonin pills. I have heard about slow release ones though which could be worth a try if they deliver the melatonin for a longer time. But I LOVE heavy quilts on me, so I'll consider saving for a weighted blanket!
Anybody else watching this at four in the morning? 🤷♂️
I was hoping from this I find out why I sleep so long, it seems my body clock could be getting fixed by the medication.
So, out of curiosity, does a LONGER sleep time stem from ADHD? When I was a teenager, I used to have to sleep 10 hours a night to really feel rested. No stem use at that time. Could this be ADHD related?
This is me! If I do not get at least 10 hrs I feel like I didn’t sleep.
Sleep is a huge issue for many kids with ADHD & ASD. Every parent FB group I’m on has numerous posts on how to get their kid to sleep. I’ve noticed that catapress and melatonin are the only drugs recommended by doctors.
I found that valerian root tincture can work well.
Legit NONE of that works for me. I've been trying for years. I can't stay asleep for squat😮💨 could there be another etiology?
I also find none of it works for me. And honestly, over the years, none of the insomnia advice has really helped. I wish I had some suggestions, but I only have commiseration
I “suck” glutathione that has been suspended in liposomes. 2ml - 4ml is enough for some to cross the blood brain barrier. It has a wonderful effect on REM sleep - the sleep that you get in the early morning when you have imaginative dreams. Don’t buy the cheapest brand. Please post if you have a good response.
😂OMG at point 7:45 : Younger children may rise earlier....when undiagnosed son was 4 he'd awake very very early, drag a chair to the front door, unlock the deadbolt, walk down the block, 3 houses, and awken his babysitters family!
That was 30 years ago. Today we'd likely be arrested for ' child endagerment' Fortunately it was a very safe neighborhood.
The things that are supposed to calm down a child for bedtime as had the opposite affect ( bathtime, book read ) So I'm at a loss. My one child seems to be a night owl, how do I change that to a better sleep?
I am an adult and still cant do it
I've been struggling with sleep for decades, from childhood to adulthood, and all I can say is for some of us, it's just really tough. I've tried so many different things, but honestly, most don't work, some work sometimes, and none work consistently. I personally find reading too stimulating, so I can't read before bed and expect to go to sleep, or even expect to be able to stop reading unless I reach the end of the book
I am not a night owl and in fact prefer to be awake early, but I am extremely sensitive to noise and light in my environment, and so as child I would stay awake and be unable to sleep if other people were awake and walking around. I could even hear quiet conversations from across the house. As an adult, I have to sleep with earplugs, but it doesn't fix it entirely
Its possible your child has additional things that are causing them to be unable to relax and fall asleep. If they're old enough to speak, I would ask them to tell you about what it's like for them to go sleep, and see if you can work out what's getting in the way. However, if they really are a natural night owl, and have a delayed circadian rhythm, your doctor is a better resource than trying to overcome that on your own
I take vyvanse, but I also need vitamin b supplements . I am told that you can't take these together, so I usually take my vitamin b early in the morning and my meds 2hrs later. because of this, I often don't have time for my vitamins, and they are skipped. I don't think waking up for 2 min and then going back to bed is the answer as I sometimes sleep through that early morning alarm. Any advice is appreciated!!
12:16 Where do i find out more about this "ADHD medication delivery system/ stimulant delivery system jordan apm" I have adult ADHD and take elvanse/vylvanse. I would rather take it before going to bed so it doesnt interfer with my sleep issues. Does it only work with methylphenidate?
It’s called Jornay PM in the US
I feel that adderall xr, makes my child stay up longer and have a hard time falling asleep, than my adderall regular (not xr) does for me. Why do doctors keep giving kids the XR?
From a young kid to a an almost 30 year old man i could not regulate my sleep.
I had to succeed despite it.
What do you do if ADHD wakes you up early in the morning and you feel tired all day? I fall asleep fine, I just can’t stay asleep.
Do you have the article for the melatonin in adults? Also, why ambien short term only? (can you point to some research on that as well?) Thanks :)
Ambien has a high likelihood of becoming dependent and tolerance raises very quickly. None of the gabaergic drugs should be used for long periods of time.
@@tylerdavis3 Should, shouldn't. Why? Also, tolerance / dependence is taking us a bit off track (assume a perfect situation where it doesn't--and also zolpidem is ok re. that).
@@---Ben---if you're over the age of 50 then go for it! Lack of sleep can cause stroke the older you are. I dunno maybe I'm wrong but that's just how I see it
What about nightmares and adhd?
Sleeptube!!!! I put one of their videos on my phone and have it under my pillow.
What is sleeptube??
Is ADD possible without sleeping problems?
What about adhd and idiopathic hypersomnia?I have both
Adult diagnosed AHDH. Adderall cause insomnia.
What about chronotypes?? You never mentón. Those cannot Change with a y of that. Of my life never could be in morning hours.
17:58 extremely dangerous advice dont do this.
Hey, life long insomniac with adhd,
just throwing this out there as it might help someone else with similar issues.
can't say why but 🍒💓Quetiapine🍒 before bed completly changed my life and sleep for the better.