Is there anything worse than a bad nightโs sleep? Just because youโve set aside eight hours to catch up on shut-eye, doesnโt necessarily mean youโll doze off straight away. While itโs no secret that mood or anxiety might play a part in a restless night, a new study has shed light on how your personality might affect your evening.
According to a new paper published in Lancet Psychiatry only, further evidence suggests that insomnia is link to certain personality traits, with many linked to negative moods.
Analysing, 2224 patients suffering from insomnia between 2010 and 2016, a team of researchers from Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience found a link between insomnia and five personality types.
The five different personalities are:
- โHighly distressedโ โ people who are wired or anxious before bedtime while also prone to depression.
- โModerately distressed, reward sensitiveโ โ again, theyโre wired before sleep, but arenโt necessarily always having negative thoughts. They reported higher than average levels of insomnia due to stress
- โModerately distressed, reward insensitiveโ โ unlike the second personality type, these people tend to be unhappy or pessimistic. Although, often in a negative mood, these personalities arenโt as likely to have diagnosed depression as type 2.
- โSlightly distressed, high reactivityโ โ This personality is like to have insomnia because of life events โ financial or relationship difficulties. Their troubles with insomnia also tend to last longer.
- โSlightly distressed, low reactivityโ โ like type 4, this personality struggles because of life events, but they donโt necessarily feel the effects as heavily. More likely to be diagnosed later in life and show high levels of demotivation.
According to sleep specialist Rafael Pelayo from the Stanford Sleep Medicine Centre, this is what researchers have believed for years.
โPeople sleep best in states of serenity,โ says Pelayo speaking to Health.com.
โYou sleep best when you feel safe, comfortable, and loved.โ
Pelayo suggests that when you go to bed in a restless state, your body will stay awake, waiting for the troubles to pass.
โIt goes into a mode of sleeping where it sleeps in spurts and gets as little sleep as possible,โ Dr. Pelayo continues. โAnd thatโs what insomnia isโitโs this kind of survival mode of sleeping.โ
Itโs similar with perfectionists. Often, theyโre brains wonโt rest with any problems unsolved.
โPeople who are perfectionists or have obsessive-compulsive disorder tend toward insomnia because they try to fix things, and you only fix things by staying awake,โ he adds. โ[Insomnia] can be a thinkerโs condition.โ
If you are struggling with shut-eye at night, itโs important to address the problem. Insomnia is treatable, so check-in with your GP who can refer you to a sleep specialist. Who doesnโt deserve eight hours a night?
Watch below: These comfort hacks will help you get a better nightโs sleep.
This article originally appeared on Menโs Health.