There is a club that you might belong to, although Iβm sure youβd rather you didnβt. Millions of people are in this club, yet it can make you feel deeply alone. It is the No Sleep Club, and Iβm a lifetime member.
We are the ones who spend hours in the dead of night, well, obviously not sleeping. But itβs more than just being awake when the rest of the world slumbers. People do that all the time, whether itβs for work or feeding babies or partying with complete disregard for future regrets. Iβve done all of those things, and while they make you tired, you at least have a purpose for being awake.
Existing in the liminal state of nothingness between midnight and 5am, the only conscious being in an unconscious world, alone with your thoughts, is frightening.Credit: ISTOCK
In the No Sleep Club, you have no purpose. Thereβs absolutely no logical reason youβre not asleep. Youβre just β awake. Maybe you wake every night at 2.13am, like clockwork β bing! β and canβt get back to sleep. Or you go to bed, ever hopeful that tonight will be the night, but instead lie in the dark as wide awake as if it were midday. Or maybe you need to wee 20 times a night. Sleeplessness is very individual.
Whatever the reason, in the No Sleep Club there is no purpose, only despair. I know that sounds grim, and Iβm sorry to be dramatic, but everything is bleak at nighttime. Even the most harmless things seem ominous. Have you ever walked into an unlit kitchen to find a three-year-old standing in the dark, clutching a balding Barbie? Flat-out terrifying.
Not as scary, though, as the dread your own mind can conjure. Existing in the liminal state of nothingness between midnight and 5am, the only conscious being in an unconscious world, alone with your thoughts, is frightening. Like mushrooms, fear grows best in the dark β¦ and our catastrophising imagination is a living horror movie.
Iβve convinced myself that my friends all hate me (they donβt); that Iβm a crashing bore (mostly, no); that my own mother thinks Iβm a loser (itβs possible); that Iβve undoubtedly got cancer (blessedly not); that no one will ever hire me again (patently untrue); that Iβm going bald. The juryβs still out on that last one, but in beautiful, rational daylight, it doesnβt feel like such a disaster. At 3am? Iβm an inconsolable mess.
Like mushrooms, fear grows best in the dark β¦ and our catastrophising imagination is a living horror movie.
JO STANLEY
Which sounds comical now, but that churning is the thing we in the No Sleep Club grow to fear. We become anxious about the anxiety itself, creating a self-perpetuating, exhausting cycle. By the time daylight comes around, I am emotionally depleted. And mortifyingly cranky throughout the day. Iβve cried in Coles, yelled at a tram driver, lost my temper at a carrot.
If youβve ever borne the brunt of my sleeplessness, forgive me. Last night I lived a thousand descents into hell in five hours, and now I have to pretend it didnβt happen.