Read Insomnia and Anxiety (Series in Anxiety and Related Disorders) Online
Authors: Jack D. Edinger Colleen E. Carney
Maintaining the Status Quo
This attentional bias for confirmatory information also makes it more likely that
such information will be perceived. Thus, a latent belief such as, “I need 8 h to sleep
or I cannot cope,” will result in distressing thoughts if there is a delay in falling
asleep. This may drive thoughts such as, “I am
never
going to sleep,” as well as
ongoing anxiety. The attentional bias toward sleep threat-related material will make
it more likely that the person will perceive the distress and anxiety symptoms and
view them as evidence that he/she will sleep poorly. This will reinforce worries
106
7 Sleep-Related Cognitive Processes
about a future consequence of not sleeping (i.e., that they will not be able to cope
with the daytime symptoms of insomnia). This may drive a safety behavior such as
drinking alcohol to hasten sleep or leaving a message on the boss’ voicemail that
they are sick and cannot come to work. Such safety behaviors will lessen the
pressure to sleep and may quell the arousal/anxiety in the short term; unfortunately,
they also reinforce the original belief that one is helpless to cope with less than 8 h
of sleep. Indeed, unhelpful/rigid beliefs about sleep predict reported usage of safety
behaviors (Woodley & Smith, 2006). The result is a system that is set up to main-
tain the status quo of insomnia.
Teasdale (1997) describes a process in depression whereby, once cognitive
structures are activated, it is as if a wholly different state of mind is adopted. The
content of this “mind-in-place” is negative and self-referent, and the process that
perpetuates this type of thinking is automatic and operates on a relatively closed
circuit. As a consequence, disconfirming information has little opportunity to get in.
The repetitive thoughts revolve around a negative view of the self, and are reinforced
by feedback loops involving the effects of depression on other cognitive systems
(e.g., attention and memory processes) and on the body (e.g., symptoms of fatigue)
(Teasdale, Taylor, Cooper, Hayhurst, & Paykel, 1995).This description would seem
applicable to insomnia as well. As applied to insomnia, Teasdale’s theory would
suggest that a person with insomnia is of a
different
insomnia-focused mind when
experiencing sleep disturbance. Attentional resources are directed at perceiving
threatening sleep-specific information that confirms unhelpful beliefs about sleep.
The repetitive thought process (i.e., worry or rumination) is similar, but the cognitive
thought content may be more related to a fixation on bodily symptoms and their
implication for poor functioning (Carney et al., 2006). Indeed, self-focused rumina-
tion (as described in depression) is not a factor in insomnia, but symptom-focused
rumination discriminated between poor and good sleepers (Carney et al., 2006). As
a result of this perpetuating cognitive process, people with insomnia often feel help-
less; that is, helpless to cope with sleep loss and helpless to produce sleep naturally.
Many people with insomnia think that their sleep system is
broken,
and they worry
about frightening, future catastrophic consequences. The collection of cognitive
strategies described in the next chapter is focused on remediating these processes.
There has been considerable evidence for a cognitive perspective in insomnia.
Sleep threat-based information processing and resultant sleep-interfering behaviors
of those with insomnia tend to set up a psychological status quo, such that it is
difficult for such individuals to break free of those factors perpetuating their diffi-
culties. This may explain the success of CBT for insomnia, a treatment that targets
unhelpful beliefs and behaviors.
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