I had tried a number of solutions. Buying a new mattress. Reducing caffeine. Eating better. I didn’t know what else to try until the major culprit revealed itself: technology.
[This is the third in a series of three articles about personal discoveries I’m making this year. The others are about the impact of our families of origin and the delights of written prayers.]
A few years ago, I was crippled by a prolonged season of insomnia. I would fall asleep easily but wake up at 2 or 3 am and stare the ceiling for hours.
“Why is this happening?” I asked myself. I was young and exercised regularly. I faced stressful seasons, like everyone does, but overall, I was leading a balanced life.
I tried a number of solutions. Buying a new mattress. Reducing caffeine. Eating better. I didn’t know what else to try until the major culprit revealed itself: technology.
I realized I was using my smartphone throughout the day and into the evening. Before falling asleep, my wife and I would watch movies lying in bed with the computer between us. Then, during the boring sleepless hours, I’d read articles on my phone. And naturally, my phone would be the first object my hand would touch and my eyes would see in the morning.
Eventually the “aha” moment arrived: that was too much artificial light and stimuli. Of course, my body was producing less melatonin in the evening and my mind was restless while sleeping. These seemingly benign objects – the phone and the computer – connected my mind to work, distractions, and a polarized world at all times.
From that insight, I reconstructed my day and started to both function and sleep better.
Sometimes I’m not disciplined and break some of these rules. But overall, this framework has helped me be more serene, centered, productive, emotionally available, and restful. I sleep more soundly at night and function with more concentration and less anxiety during the day.
This change in my rhythm and relationship to technology has fed the virtuous cycle I described in my previous two articles, helping me become aware of the impact of my past and cultivate a deeper spiritual life.
What personal changes have been helpful to you recently?
René Breuel, pastor of an evangelical church in Rome.
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