Behavioral & Mental Health Conditions Series *Updating In January
Course overview
Lesson Overview

16.7 Navigating Nightmares and Sleep Disruption: Nightmares and sleep disruptions can appear long after trauma, because the brain continues processing memories while you rest, trying to protect you from harm that no longer exists. You learn to approach nighttime gently instead of fearing it—creating a wind-down routine that helps your mind shift from alertness to calm, using comforting objects or sounds that signal safety, and practicing grounding techniques if you wake up in fear. You allow yourself time to settle back into your body, reminding your brain that the memory is not happening again. When bad dreams return, you rewrite the story in waking life by imagining a different ending, helping the mind learn that the danger has passed. You keep showing up each night, building trust that rest is a place of recovery rather than threat. As sleep slowly improves, your days begin to feel brighter and your resilience deeper, because you are healing not only while awake but also while you dream.

About this course

A structured and empowering learning path that helps individuals understand, manage, and balance complex behavioral and mental health patterns. Through guided topics on OCD, ADHD, anxiety, trauma, depression, and other conditions, this series teaches self

This course includes:
  • Guided behavioral and emotional training

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