Understanding Sleep
What Is Sleep?
Sleep is essential for physical health, emotional balance, learning, and attention. It unfolds through biological processes that operate largely outside conscious control.
While many meditation apps treat sleeplessness as a problem to proactively fix, Waking Up approaches it as part of a broader inquiry into awareness: What happens as the mind settles? How does consciousness experience change as we begin to drift off? And how do effort and resistance interfere with natural rhythms of sleep?
Chronic sleep deprivation has real consequences for mood, health, and cognitive function. But struggling with sleep—monitoring it closely, worrying about each night, or treating restlessness as a failure—can create stress and make rest feel still more elusive.
Meditation helps by directing attention away from efforts to control sleep and toward your moment-to-moment experience as you rest. This shift doesn’t guarantee sleep, but it reduces the anxiety and sense of effort that make it seem fleeting.
A common misconception is that sleep can be optimized through willpower, tracking, or constant self-correction. Sleep is not a performance metric. Focusing too closely on stages, scores, or outcomes can heighten arousal and undermine rest.
Another misunderstanding is assuming that occasional insomnia is wrong. Restless nights are a normal part of life. The real difficulty often comes from what can result from occasional sleep difficulty: frustration, worry, and self-judgment.
Meditation for sleep involves recognizing effort, expectation, and resistance as they arise—and letting them soften. Rather than trying to make sleep happen, you learn to notice when the mind is striving and to allow the body to settle.
Through practices like deep rest and yoga nidra, Waking Up helps create conditions that support relaxation and rest without pressure. Even when sleep doesn’t come immediately, the ability to rest without struggle can make nights feel less frustrating and days easier to meet.