『Former Insomniac by End Insomnia』のカバーアート

Former Insomniac by End Insomnia

Former Insomniac by End Insomnia

著者: Ivo H.K.
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Welcome to Former Insomniac with Ivo H.K., founder at End Insomnia. After suffering from insomnia for 5 brutal years and trying "everything" to fix it, I developed a new approach targeting the root cause of insomnia: sleep anxiety (or the fear of sleeplessness). In this podcast, I talk about the End Insomnia System and I share tips, learnings, and insights from overcoming insomnia and tell the stories of people who did so you can apply the principles to end insomnia for good, too.Copyright 2026 Ivo H.K. 個人的成功 心理学 心理学・心の健康 自己啓発 衛生・健康的な生活
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  • You Don't Need 8 Hours of Sleep (And Insomnia Won't Kill You)
    2026/05/23

    There are two ideas about sleep that almost everyone with insomnia believes. Both feel like facts. Both fuel anxiety. And both deserve a serious reality check.

    Belief #1: You need 8 hours of sleep

    This one is everywhere. Articles, podcasts, well-meaning friends. The message is clear: eight hours or you're damaging yourself.

    But it's not true. At least not universally.

    The National Sleep Foundation puts average adult sleep needs at 7 to 9 hours, but notes that as few as 6 hours is sufficient for some people.

    For those over 65, as few as 5 hours can be appropriate. We all have unique sleep needs, and trying to force yourself into an arbitrary number can actually create the problem you're afraid of.

    I've seen people develop insomnia specifically because they tried to make themselves get eight hours when their body didn't need it.

    They'd lie in bed for long stretches, awake and increasingly anxious. That planted seeds of doubt about their ability to sleep. The doubt became anxiety. The anxiety became insomnia. All because of a number that didn't apply to them.

    Here's a simpler way to think about it. When you come out the other side of insomnia, you'll probably sleep about as much as you used to before it started.

    If that's seven hours, great. If it's six and a half, that's fine too. The real test isn't a number on a chart. It's whether you feel reasonably refreshed when you wake up and have decent energy for most of the day.

    And notice I said "most of the day." Normal sleepers have energy dips, too. Many don't feel amazing when they first wake up. Almost everyone hits an afternoon slump thanks to circadian rhythms.

    After dealing with insomnia for a while, it's easy to develop perfectionistic standards for what good sleep should feel like. But "good sleep" doesn't mean feeling incredible every waking minute. It just means having enough fuel to live your life.

    Belief #2: Insomnia is ruining your health

    You've probably seen the headlines. Poor sleep linked to heart disease. Sleep deprivation connected to Alzheimer's. The message feels terrifying, and when you're already anxious about sleep, it pours gasoline on the fire.

    So let's look at what the research actually says.

    A 2018 meta-analysis examined chronic insomnia and mortality across 17 studies, spanning nearly 37 million people tracked for an average of 11.6 years.

    The finding: no difference in odds of death for people with insomnia symptoms compared to those without.

    Read that again. Across 37 million people over more than a decade, insomnia did not increase the risk of dying.

    What about the studies linking poor sleep to diseases like cardiovascular problems or Alzheimer's? Those are correlation studies, and correlation is not causation.

    Just because two things occur together doesn't mean one caused the other. It's equally plausible that people with Alzheimer's or heart disease have more trouble sleeping because of those conditions, not the other way around.

    On top of that, a lot of sleep research relies on self-reported data (notoriously unreliable), small sample sizes, or statistical thresholds that make the findings hard to replicate.

    That doesn't mean sleep research is worthless. But it means the scary headlines deserve a lot more skepticism than most people give them.

    There's no final answer on every link between sleep and health. But there is a strong reason to believe it's nowhere near as dire as the headlines suggest.

    Why this matters right now

    Both of these beliefs, the eight-hour rule and the health panic, do the same thing: they raise the stakes on sleep.

    And higher stakes mean more anxiety, which means a more activated nervous system at night, which means worse sleep.

    Letting go of these beliefs won't fix your insomnia on its own. But it removes two significant sources of unnecessary fear.

    And every layer of fear you peel away brings your nervous system one step closer to the calm it needs to let sleep happen on its own.

    You don't need eight hours. Your health is not in danger. You can let those go.

    If you're looking to recover from insomnia for good by fixing the root cause (hyper-arousal) 100% naturally (no pills, no supplements, no CBT-i), then:

    Schedule your FREE Sleep Evaluation Call

    To peaceful sleep,

    Ivo at End Insomnia

    Why should you listen to me?

    I recovered from insomnia after 5 brutal years of suffering. I've now coached 100s like you to end their insomnia for good, 100% naturally, by fixing the root cause - hyperarousal.

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    5 分
  • The Hardest Part of Recovering from Insomnia Isn't What You Think
    2026/05/16
    How Long Until You Recover From Insomnia?This is probably the question you want answered most. And I wish I could give you a clean number. But the honest answer is: it depends, and trying to pin it down will actually slow you down.Here's what I can tell you.The timeline nobody wants to hearInsomnia doesn't develop overnight. The anxiety, the unhelpful behaviors, the conditioned hyperarousal, all of it builds and reinforces itself over weeks, months, sometimes years.So it's unrealistic to expect an overnight solution. At least not a lasting one.You may experience some relief quickly as you start applying new knowledge and tools. Certain shifts in understanding can bring immediate comfort.But lasting change, the kind where your nervous system genuinely recalibrates and sleep starts happening without effort, that usually takes a couple of months of consistent practice.For people who have had insomnia for many years, or who've had an especially traumatic experience with it, it can take longer. Sometimes six months or more.But here's what's encouraging: sometimes the people with the most severe insomnia move past it surprisingly fast. The speed depends on many factors and can't be easily predicted.I've heard people say that if they just knew for certain their insomnia would be gone in six months, they'd feel enormous relief right now.That makes sense. Uncertainty is hard. But trying to lock down a timeline creates the very anxiety that gets in the way.Why monitoring your progress backfiresThis is one of the most counterintuitive parts of the process: the more closely you track your recovery, the slower it tends to go.When you're evaluating every night ("Was that better? Was that worse? Am I making progress?"), you're feeding the exact pattern that drives insomnia.You're treating sleep like a performance metric. You're scanning for evidence that things are working or not working. And that vigilance keeps your nervous system on alert.The better approach is to let go of the timeline altogether. Take it one day at a time. Apply the tools consistently without grading the results on a nightly basis. Trust the process even when individual nights feel discouraging.There will be ups and downs. Good stretches followed by rough patches. Nights where you feel like you've gone backwards.That's not failure. That's how recovery actually looks. It's not a straight line, and expecting one will only create more frustration.What our process actually asks of youThis isn't a quick fix. It's not as easy as taking a pill. But it's far more effective, and far more empowering, because what you're building is lasting.Our process asks for patience. It asks you to learn new ways of relating to your thoughts, your emotions, and your body.It asks you to face uncomfortable experiences rather than run from them. It asks you to accept what you can't control while taking action on what you can.None of that is easy. But if you're already trapped in the suffering of insomnia, dealing with the dread and exhaustion and frustration every single day, isn't it worth committing to something that requires effort but can actually free you?One shift that helps immediatelyEven before your sleep changes, something else can change: how you relate to the process.If you can stop treating recovery as a destination you need to arrive at and start seeing it as something you're living through, day by day, the pressure drops.You stop white-knuckling your way toward "fixed" and start paying attention to the smaller shifts.A night that was slightly less distressing. A morning where you bounced back faster than expected. A moment at 2 a.m. where you caught yourself spiraling and chose differently.Those moments matter. They're not just signs of progress. They are the progress.Try to appreciate the journey. It's not easy, but it's deeply personal.It's all about you, after all, your mind, your nervous system, your relationship with yourself. And what you learn along the way will serve you far beyond sleep.If you're looking to recover from insomnia for good by fixing the root cause (hyper-arousal) 100% naturally (no pills, no supplements, no CBT-i), then let's see if we can help:​Schedule your FREE Sleep Evaluation Call​To peaceful sleep,Ivo at End InsomniaWhy should you listen to me?I recovered from insomnia after 5 brutal years of suffering. I've now coached 100s like you to end their insomnia for good, 100% naturally, by fixing the root cause - hyperarousal.
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    5 分
  • The 6-Second Practice That Calms Your Nervous System
    2026/05/09
    What if one of the most effective things you could do for your sleep takes about six seconds and involves saying a single sentence to yourself?It sounds too simple. But there's real science behind it. When you offer yourself a caring phrase during a moment of suffering, it creates a measurable shift in your nervous system. Threat activity quiets down. Rumination loosens. Your body begins to move out of fight-or-flight and toward rest.Here's how to try it.The practiceBring to mind something that's been causing you pain. It could be your sleep, or anything else that feels heavy right now. Don't just think about it abstractly. Try to feel where it lives in your body. Maybe it's tightness in your chest, a knot in your stomach, a dull heaviness behind your eyes, or a kind of emotional fatigue that's hard to locate but impossible to ignore.Once you've found it, keep your attention there. And then, quietly, say one of these phrases to yourself:"I'm here for you. I see how much you're hurting right now.""This is really hard. May I be gentle with myself.""May I treat myself with the same kindness I'd offer someone I love."That's it. You're not trying to fix anything. You're not talking yourself out of the pain. You're simply acknowledging what's there and meeting it with warmth instead of judgment.What this does, over time, is remarkable. Rather than fighting your emotional pain or beating yourself up for feeling it, you create a softening. You become someone who can sit with difficulty without making it worse. And that capacity, the ability to be with discomfort instead of against it, is one of the most powerful things you can develop for your sleep.Why is this especially hard for high achieversIf you're someone who has always pushed yourself, who takes pride in discipline and strength, self-compassion can feel like the opposite of everything that made you successful. It can feel like weakness. Like giving up. Like making excuses.Many people with insomnia carry a deep shame about it. They see it as a failure, proof that they can't handle something that everyone else manages effortlessly. And when they try all the "right" things and still can't sleep, the shame gets louder.Here's the truth: insomnia has nothing to do with how strong or capable you are. Some of the most driven, high-functioning people in the world struggle with it. The very qualities that make you successful, the vigilance, the high standards, the refusal to let things slide, can also make your nervous system very good at staying on alert.Self-compassion isn't about abandoning those qualities. It's about recognizing that the same intensity you bring to everything else has been turned inward, against yourself, in a way that's making the problem worse. You can be ambitious and kind to yourself. You can hold yourself to high standards and still offer yourself understanding when you're in pain. These aren't contradictions. They're complements.Making it a habitYou don't need to set aside thirty minutes a day for this. The practice works best when it's woven into real moments of difficulty.When you catch yourself spiraling into self-criticism at night, pause and offer yourself a caring phrase. When you wake up exhausted and the first thought is "here we go again," try replacing it with "this is hard, and I'm doing my best." When you notice tension building in your body as bedtime approaches, focus your attention on that tension and meet it with gentleness rather than frustration.At first, it will feel forced. You might not believe the words. That's fine. The practice isn't about belief. It's about repetition. Over time, the default shifts. Criticism stops being automatic. Kindness becomes more available.And a mind that treats itself with care instead of contempt is a mind that's far less interested in keeping you awake all night.If you're looking to recover from insomnia for good by fixing the root cause (hyper-arousal) 100% naturally (no pills, no supplements, no CBT-i), then see if we can help here: ​Schedule your FREE Sleep Evaluation Call​To peaceful sleep,Ivo at End InsomniaWhy should you listen to me? I recovered from insomnia after 5 brutal years of suffering. I've now coached 100s like you to end their insomnia for good, 100% naturally, by fixing the root cause - hyperarousal.
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    6 分
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