Sleep Hypnosis & Bedtime Stories: Your Ticket to Snoozeville

Sleep Anxiety: The Sleep Reset You Need Tonight | Ad Free

Suzanne Mills: Sleep Hypnosis & Insomnia Specialist

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Sleep anxiety keeps more people awake than actual insomnia. If you've been lying there calculating hours, catastrophizing about tomorrow, or willing yourself to sleep, your anxiety about sleep is the problem. This episode uses hypnotherapy and guided meditation to break that cycle tonight. You'll learn to recognize what's tethering you to wakefulness: the clock-checking, the monitoring, the effort itself. And you'll release it all. The solution isn't trying harder. It's surrendering completely. This sleep hypnosis will help you let go of sleep anxiety and find the deep relief and rest you've been searching for. Real sleep is possible again.

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All content by Your Ticket to Snoozeville is for educational and entertainment purposes only and does not replace or provide professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your medical professional before making any changes to your treatment, and if in any doubt, contact your doctor. Please listen in a place where you can safely go to sleep. Your Ticket to Snoozeville is not responsible or liable for any loss, damage, or injury arising from the use of this content.


This podcast won't help everyone. I wish it could, but some people have sleep challenges that require real medical attention. It could be anything from sleep apnea to restless legs syndrome or medication interactions; if you're experiencing any of these, please talk to a healthcare provider.

But if you're like most people lying awake right now, you can't sleep for a very different reason. It's called sleep anxiety, and that is something I can absolutely help you with. Sleep anxiety is anxiety about sleep itself. It's when you check the clock all the time, calculating the hours. It's when you catastrophize about tomorrow. It's monitoring yourself constantly, thinking, "Am I falling asleep yet? Now am I falling asleep?"

The problem is that sleep requires surrender, but anxiety demands control. You're trying to force something that can only happen when you stop trying. It's like trying to make yourself have fun, or trying to force yourself to forget something—it doesn't work.

So tonight, we're going to break that cycle. We're going to help you recognize what you're holding on to—the clock watching, the catastrophizing, and the effort itself—and then we're going to help you release it. All of it.

But before we begin, please make sure that you are somewhere safe to fall asleep. This episode contains hypnotherapy techniques; they're designed to guide you into deep sleep. And just a quick thank you to all of you who follow the show. In a world filled with massive media empires and podcasts with unlimited budgets, you are helping a small, independent podcast survive. We should all have at least one independent podcast in our favorites, and if you haven't followed yet, I would be grateful if you would.

Now, let's get you settled. If you haven't yet, reach over and turn off your light—the lamp on your bedside table, the overhead light, whatever you've got on—and let the room go dark. Take your time arranging everything how you like it. Your blankets: maybe you're sleeping under just one thin sheet tonight because you can't stand feeling hot, or maybe you're the opposite. Maybe you love weight—three blankets, four, piled on top of you, making you feel secure and held. Whatever your preference, arrange it now. Get it exactly right. Your pillow: punch it if you need to, fold it in half, stack two pillows, whatever works for you.

And find your perfect position. Maybe you sleep on your back, maybe you curl up on your side with one knee bent, maybe you're a sprawler—you take up all the space. It doesn't matter what position you choose. What matters is that you find it, that you're comfortable.

And now, look up—or imagine looking up—toward where your ceiling should be. But instead of plaster or paint or wooden beams, imagine the night sky stretched above you. The April night sky. Orion the Hunter is setting his shoulder; the red giant Betelgeuse glows like an ember.

But it's not just these bright stars. There are thousands of others, tens of thousands. Some are so faint they're barely suggestions of light, and beyond those, millions more that your eyes can't detect at all. But they're there, each one pouring light into the universe. All that light. Light from all those stars, traveling for years, for centuries, through the vacuum of space and into your room, filling the air around you.

That starlight is here now. It's pooling in your room. The light moves like liquid. It flows across your floor, it rises up the legs of your furniture, and it swirls in gentle currents through the air. And now it's reaching you. It's warm where it touches you. It feels like the most soothing water you've ever slipped into, like an ocean of pure, perfect, liquid warmth against your skin.

And as you lie there, you realize that this light is lifting you just enough that you're no longer quite pressing into your mattress the way you were a moment ago. You're floating, held by starlight. And wherever it touches you, it's drawing something out. All the tension you've been carrying, all the stress that's built up in your muscles, in your tissues, since the moment you woke up this morning. The weight of your day, the worry, the indecision—the starlight is pulling it all out of you like a magnet. You can almost see it leaving your body, dissolving into the silver light and disappearing.

The starlight touches your forehead. Feel the light smoothing any muscles there, ironing out that furrow. The muscles across your forehead are releasing, all that tightness dissolving. Your eyelids, already closed, grow heavier. They want to stay closed now—not because you're holding them shut, but because they're simply too heavy to lift.

Now your jaw. We clench it when we're stressed, when we're concentrating, when we're frustrated. Hours and hours of clenching. Feel the starlight touching your jaw now. It's drawing that tension out like pulling out a splinter. And your jaw is heavy now, loose, all that chronic tightness dissolving into the light.

The starlight moves to your neck. Your neck is a marvel of engineering: seven small bones, the cervical vertebrae, stacked on top of each other, held in place by ligaments and muscles. They're holding up your head all day. Feel the starlight touching your neck, all those tight, overworked muscles unwinding. Your head sinks a little deeper into your pillow. You don't have to hold it up anymore.

Your shoulders now. This is where so much stress lives. Stress settles into our shoulders like weight. We're literally carrying responsibility, worry; it all collects right here in the muscles of the shoulders and upper back. Feel the starlight touching your shoulders now. It's drawing all of that weight away. Your shoulders are dropping, settling down, down into the starlight beneath you.

The starlight moves down your arms now, into your upper arms—your biceps and triceps, which you've used all day for a thousand small tasks. They're going soft now. Your forearms relax. Now your hands, your wrists, all held together by tendons, by ligaments, by tiny muscles. Your hands can grip with enough force to hold your entire body weight; they can also thread a needle, play a musical instrument, type out your thoughts. But now, feel the starlight working into the base of each finger, into your wrists. Your hands are uncurling. They're opening like flowers. Your wrists are loose. Your hands feel wider, softer.

The starlight moves to your chest now, and your rib cage. And inside your chest, your heart is beating. Every single beat is your heart contracting. But now, your heart rate is slowing. For most people, a resting heart rate during sleep drops to somewhere between 50 and 60 beats per minute. Your heart is finding that rhythm now. Slower, steadier. Each beat calm and strong.

When we're anxious, our breathing becomes shallow. We breathe from our chest instead of our belly, and we take quick, short breaths. And when we do this, we're not getting the oxygen exchange we need. But each breath is deeper now, easier. Your lungs are filling completely, all the way to the bottom.

Your heart rate is slowing further. Your blood pressure begins to drop. When you're stressed, your blood vessels constrict—they get narrower and your heart has to work harder. But when you relax, like now, your blood vessels dilate. They widen, and blood can flow more easily. Your heart doesn't have to work as hard. The starlight is helping all of this happen. Your muscles are receiving the message to soften. Everything is downshifting into rest mode.

The starlight moves down into your hips now. Your hip flexors get tight from sitting, from standing and moving through your day. And when they're tight, they pull on your lower back. They create discomfort that you might not even identify as coming from your hips. Feel the starlight working into those deep muscles now, unwinding them. Your knees release, your calves soften.

And finally, your feet. Your feet are architectural marvels. They absorb the impact of every step you take; they balance your entire body weight. Feel the starlight touching your feet now—your arches, which support your entire structure; your heels, where the largest bone in your foot has been bearing weight all day; the ball of your foot; each toe. All that tension is being drawn away. Your feet feel warm and heavy and utterly relaxed.

Your entire body is floating now on this silvery-white starlight. Every muscle soft, every cell renewed. And your breathing moves easily, deeply. Your blood pressure is lowering. Your nervous system is quiet. And you notice that beneath you, deeper in the starlight, there's something else—a deeper warmth that penetrates all the way to your center. It's darker below, too—the kind of darkness where dreams are born. And it's quiet there in a way that the surface is not. Up here, you can still hear the occasional sound from outside, but down here in the depths of the starlight, there's a silence so complete it's more like stillness.

That's where you want to be. That's where sleep is. It's right there, so close you can almost touch it. But something is keeping you here at the surface. What's holding you here?

Let's imagine that in your right hand, you're holding something. The clock. You can see its glowing numbers.When we can't sleep, we often check that clock and do the calculations. If I fall asleep right now, I'll get six hours. If I fall asleep by two, I'll get five hours.The math is automatic. You can't help it. Time passing, hours slipping away. You check the clock because you're anxious about not sleeping, and checking the clock makes you more anxious. The anxiety makes it harder to sleep. Your body doesn't need the clock. The clock is just making this harder. Open your hand. Let the clock go and watch it dissolve into the starlight.The numbers blur, fade, disappear. The glow extinguishes. The weight of it in your hand vanishes, and you sink down into the starlight. The light feels different here. The warmth increases. Your heart rate drops another few beats per minute.The muscles in your face, which you thought were already relaxed, release even more. You're closer now. Closer to that place where sleep waits.But there's something else. Imagine in your left hand. You're holding something. It's not a physical object, but you can feel its weight. It's a story. The story of tomorrow. The story of the damage not sleeping will do. The catastrophe. You've been playing it in your mind. You'll wake up exhausted. You'll make mistakes. People will notice. The whole day will be a disaster. Open your hand. Let this go. Tomorrow, you may be tired. That is possible. It's even likely. But tired is survivable. The body adapts. It finds what it needs. You will function tomorrow. Not perfectly, but you will function. And there is absolutely no reason to be anxious. Watch your story dissolve into the starlight. All that imagined disaster. It fades into the light. And you sink deeper. The starlight is wrapping around you now, like something solid. Your brain is releasing the first whispers of melatonin.Your muscles are so heavy now, so loose that moving feels impossible. You're so much closer now to that deep place. You can almost feel it below you. Welcoming you. But you're still holding something. You're checking yourself.You're monitoring. You're thinking, am I falling asleep now? How about now? How relaxed am I, really? You've been surveilling your own state. Watching for sleep, like you could control it if you just paid close enough attention. But that watching is keeping you awake. That monitoring is activating the very parts of your brain that need to go quiet for sleep to happen. This is sleep anxiety too. It's hypervigilance. Let it go. Stop checking. Stop watching yourself. Release the need to know if this is working. Whether you're doing it right, watch it dissolve into the starlight. That constant internal surveillance. It fades away. And you sink deeper still. Your mind is quieter here. Thoughts are less like sentences and more like a mirror. Like fragments.Like images drifting past. Nothing sticks. Nothing demands attention.Your brain is shifting modes. Moving from beta waves. Alert.Active. Toward alpha. Toward theta.The border between waking and sleeping. Is blurring. One more thing.One last thing you're holding on to. The effort itself. The trying.You've been working so hard at this. Trying to make yourself sleep. But what does that effort look like? Usually it's focusing.Commanding your body to relax. Demanding that your mind shut off. Thinking the right thoughts. Not thinking the wrong thoughts. Controlling it. And none of that works. Because sleep can't be forced. Or controlled. Or commanded. Sleep is a surrender. It's letting go. The harder you try to sleep, the more awake you become. It's like trying to force yourself to forget something. Like trying to make yourself have fun. Let go of the effort. Release the need to control this. And watch the effort dissolve into the starlight. All that trying.All that forcing. Watch it fade away. And now, finally, with nothing left to hold on to, you sink.You're surrounded now. Held. Completely. The starlight is everywhere. It's inside you. And outside you. The silence is everywhere. You can hear your own heartbeat. Quiet.And rhythmic. All the anxiety is gone. The clock doesn't exist anymore.The story of tomorrow has vanished. The monitoring has ceased. There's nothing left but this. This floating. This warmth. This darkness. Your brain is producing delta waves now. The slowest brain waves. The ones that only appear in deep sleep.Your memories from today are being processed. Filed away. Your immune system is manufacturing. New cells. Everything is working. Exactly as it should.Sleep is here. It's been here all along. Patiently waiting for you to arrive.