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

23.3 Calming Nighttime Anxiety: Calming nighttime anxiety means learning to slow the torrent of thoughts that often strike hardest when everything around you is quiet. You discover that your mind may bring forward fears or unfinished concerns as soon as the day stops distracting you. Instead of letting those thoughts take over, you develop calming routines like breathing deeply, practicing gentle stretches, listening to peaceful sounds, or journaling before bed to release mental tension. You also challenge the belief that nighttime thoughts require action—understanding that the mind exaggerates worry when tired. By guiding your thoughts back to calmness, you protect your rest and remind yourself that nighttime exists for recovery, not problem-solving.

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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