i am grateful

I don’t fall asleep easily. I never have. For much of my adult life, I actually dreaded going to sleep, because I had panic attacks every night that woke me up in absolute terror. (Once I figured out why they were happening, they stopped. It only took 45 years. Go me.)


It’s tough to fall asleep for me, because that’s when my anxiety does its most aggressive work expressing itself. Before I even hit the pillow, my brain is replaying everything I’m pretty sure I did wrong that day, taking occasional breaks to worry about, well, everything. My brain will work itself up so much it actually makes my heart speed up. When I’m supposed to be relaxing.


It’s not great, Dan.


But I started doing something that’s been incredibly helpful, and I thought I’d share it.


Every night as I’m getting ready for bed, I focus on a list of things for which I am grateful. I call it “doing my gratitudes”. I just start somewhere, like “I am grateful that I am going to sleep in a warm, safe bed. I am grateful that I get to share this bed with Anne. I am grateful I have enough food.” Stuff like that. I remind myself that there is so much that is good in my life, and by thinking about those things, recognizing those things, and making space to feel grateful for them, I do not give my anxiety an opportunity to grab hold of anything and go to work on me.


Sometimes, it starts with silly stuff like “I’m grateful I got a shutout in NHL20” or “I’m grateful we have more LaCroix than we can drink in a day” and then I quickly get to “I am grateful I can afford a PS4 and NHL20. I am grateful that I have the dexterity required to play video games. I am grateful we can afford more LaCroix than we can drink in a day” and so on.


There’s no right or wrong way to do this. If you’re anxiety prone like I am, you may lock up trying to do your gratitudes the right way. Tell your anxiety I said, “Go fuck yourself. There’s no right or wrong way to be sincerely grateful. You just are grateful, and that’s enough.”


I’ve been doing this for months now. Maybe it’s a year or so? I don’t know. What even is time these days and how is it Thursday when it was literally just Friday yesterday that doesn’t even make sense.


You don’t have to tell anyone you’re doing this, and it’s not a contest to see who is the most grateful. It’s just a way to focus on the good things in this world that are worth fightin’ for, Mister Frodo, and to remember that even though everything is terrible, there are still bright lights shining in all this darkness.


Those bright lights are so important right now, whether they are stadium lights turning night into day, or pinpricks that barely allow candlelight through black velvet. Spending time in gratitude makes it easier for me to find the light, and remember that it is there, even when I can’t see it.


I’ve found that, even when I’m having a rough day, deliberately switching my brain into gratitude is my escape hatch. Maybe it’ll work for you, or at least help you find yours.




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Published on August 20, 2020 14:54
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message 1: by Kay (new)

Kay I'm so pleased that this is helping you, Wil.

Gratitude is an amazing thing. It also makes us aware of what others are lacking, and opens our sense of compassion. x


message 2: by Larissa (new)

Larissa Cezana I wanted to start by thanking you Wil for sharing this with us. They're certainly words that can make a difference in the lives of people who need help with anxiety. I know how difficult it's to get to sleep. I'll certainly try to be more grateful for the good things in life. Thanks.


message 3: by Alice (new)

Alice Thank you for sharing, I will definitely be trying this.


Gabriel Meister This is beautiful—and I’ve shared it with several friends now. Thank you, Wil.

A poem you may enjoy. I saw it on the NYC subway years and years ago, it never left me.

The Ideal
by James Fenton

This is where I came from.
I passed this way.
This should not be shameful
Or hard to say.

A self is a self.
It is not a screen.
A person should respect
What he has been.

This is my past
Which I shall not discard.
This is the ideal.
This is hard.


message 5: by Heather (new)

Heather Thank you for sharing this, Wil. What a beautiful way to fall asleep! I will definitely be showing this to my younger son who, like you and I, suffers from an inability to go straight from awake to sleep. Through the years, I have told my son to say his prayers and that will help him fall asleep. At the end of his prayers, I told him to bless everyone in his life. We would do this together when he was little and as he has grown, he now says it to himself. It was a natural progression we both made because he thought counting sheep was silly -- and it probably is. I think counting his blessings would be another natural progression of his prayers and blessing his family and friends. Just an aside, I was having terrible trouble sleeping throughout our Corona Virus national shut down. A couple of months ago, I tried an audio book for the first time but decided I do not have the type of attention span needed to listen to a book. It put me to sleep. I now listen to books before bed. Short stories, I have been listening to the same short story for about 2 weeks now. I feel like it slows down my irrational, silly, cannot shut it off, brain. It is working for me 😂 Thank you again for the share! Have a good night 🥱


message 6: by Closet Rebel (new)

Closet Rebel I say whatever works.

I had a boss several years ago that told me his secret when I told him it always took me at least 2 hours to fall asleep.

He said he clears his mind and thinks about nothing. No reason to worry about stuff while trying to sleep when you can't do anything about it. Save it for the morning

I found it is very difficult to think about nothing but it did help when I was able to do this. Also, if something I was thinking about something I needed to do, I would write it down, that way I knew I would not forget it in the morning.

Lately I found if I read my kindle when I go to bed after about 15 - 30 minutes my eyes start rolling and I close book and fall asleep immediately.


message 7: by Jason (new)

Jason Runyan Thanks for sharing this. It's a message that people need to hear.


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