Ghosts in the Machine

Yesterday, my acupuncturist said, “This session should make you very relaxed and tired and you should sleep very well.” That prediction actually seemed to be true until 5am when the ghost in my room pulled and released the window blind and woke me up like a flash-bang detonated next to my head. I had been sound asleep, dreaming about Janis Joplin of all people. It’s one of those spring-loaded, black-out blinds and the sound of its uncontrolled retraction ricocheted off of every surface in the room and bounced around my cranium like a high-speed destructive bowling ball. After figuring out where I was and who I was and what had happened, I regained control of my fight-or-flight panting and was able to release my fingernails and toenails from their death-grip in the ceiling plaster. I lay down, trying to go back to sleep, but I knew that sun would come streaming in soon and I wake up from the glow of an alarm clock, so I had to make a move.

I stepped onto the chest below the window (climbing Mount Everest) and reached up in the dark to try to get a grip of the end of the blind, but it had wound itself too tightly to get my fingers behind an edge. Then I realised I was standing in my bedroom window naked and, if someone happened to be out there in the garden or my neighbour happened to have insomnia and was gazing out her window, they were getting an eye-full. I stepped down off the chest, put on my robe and climbed back up (Mount Everest again). After fiddling with the blind from every angle, I knew I wouldn’t make it budge without some sort of pliers to grip the end. I was also still shaking from the adrenaline and sweating from the exertion of standing up out of bed, climbing, reaching above my head… So, I gave up and went searching for my eye shades. Of course, they were in none of the usual places. I went into my meditation room and found my dusty back-up pair, knowing all these lights on and this rummaging was waking me up more and more. And worse: the dogs downstairs would think it was morning and, once they’re up, I’m screwed. That’s a combined total of 170lbs of hunger.

Back in bed, I lay trying to sleep for about an hour and, just when I was drifting off, the Rascally Robin started pecking at the window in our living room. I keep hoping it’ll stop and I keep forgetting to do something about it during the day, but EVERY MORNING AT AROUND 6AM this robin starts attacking his reflection in our window. I realise this wouldn’t wake up 90% of you ~ it’s a window on a different floor, for god’s sake ~ and I tried so hard to talk myself into believing it was just the soothing clickclack of a branch in the wind, but it didn’t work: I would start to drift off and it would wake me up every few minutes. Over and over. Torture. SO, I got up and closed my bedroom door. I know, this seems like an obvious remedy ~ something I should always be doing ~ but a closed door in our house is like a dog whistle. I could lie in bed all day with the door open and neither dog would have any interest in coming in, but, close that door and they are behind it scratching, whining and pacing back and forth, sure they are missing out on some awesome adventure.

Sure enough, as soon as I closed the door, got back in bed, put my eye shades on and settled down ~ just long enough for me to do all those things ~ there was a scratch on the door. And then a whine. I got up, let my dog in, let him on the bed, told him to shut up and then we both lay down and listened to the Rascally Robin pecking on the window downstairs. When it got a little louder, my dog started to get interested. He started doing that “aa-FUH” thing that dogs do ~ that half-bark puffing air through their lips. So, I started looking for the earplugs that my husband had gotten me ages ago. Up out of bed, rummage rummage, back in bed. The little packet only had one earplug in it. Not joking. Up out of bed, rummage rummage, got second packet, back in bed, insert earplugs. Now, picture this: cpap mask, medical tape over my mouth, my Zeo headband, earplugs and eye mask. Seriously?

The thing they don’t tell you about earplugs is, if you lie on your side in half-sleep and feel something burrowing into your ear, you wake up. Because that could be spiders or earwigs or ticks, oh my! The other thing they don’t tell you is, earplugs HURT. They make your ears ache. They make your head ache. Especially if you have the wee-est ears in the world, like I do. If I were watching, say, Led Zeppelin play a concert, I might not notice the ache. Or, at least, it would certainly be worth it. But, lying in the lightening room, feeling exhausted and traumatized, it began to feel like someone had filled my eardrums with ever-expanding putty. And, although I couldn’t hear the robin anymore, I was suddenly enveloped in my OWN noise. My bed was a sensory deprivation chamber. My gurgling stomach sounded as if it were amplified through a long pipe into my brain. My heart was like the drug smuggling airport scene in Midnight Express. The hum of the cpap and my metronomical breathing were like Dave in the spacesuit trying to change to manual controls, while Hal sings, “Daisy, Daaiseeeey…”

Just as I convinced myself this was soothing, womb-like and I could deal with the earplug pressure, my 105lb Rhodesian ridgeback jumped off the bed, went downstairs and rang the bell hanging on the front door ~ his signal to go out. And then he rang it again. And again. I knew, however, this was a call for breakfast. He didn’t need to go out. The cheeky bugger was trying to get me downstairs to feed him. I ripped the tape off my mouth and yelled, “GO TO BED!” It worked for about half an hour and then I heard my husband getting ready for work. I called it quits at 8:30am.

My sleep graph: the top line "W" = Wake

My sleep graph: the top line “W” = Wake

I did not embellish any of this and, although, I’m really trying to make it into a comedy, it devastated me. After all these weeks of horrible sleep, to be roused permanently from such a nice slumber after 5 hours, feels so unfair. When I came downstairs, my husband told me he was getting up at 6:30am tomorrow morning (a Sunday) because of the clocks going forward. I burst into tears.

I’ll try valerian for a week or two, but, if it doesn’t help, I’m moving on to brain chemical-altering, heavy-duty drugs. End of story. I thought I could will my sleep better, but this is beyond my abilities. I hope I haven’t caused permanent damage.

9 thoughts on “Ghosts in the Machine

  1. triciaruth says:

    I occasionally have a short burst of heavy-duty sleeping pills (twice in the last three years for a handful of days at a time) when I get into a pattern of sleeping badly, in an effort to re-educate my body into how it’s done. Good luck.

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    • E. Milo says:

      Yep, that might be what I try next. I cannot believe I haven’t yet. Every expert says treat sleep first. I’m just such a drug scaredy-cat. I’ll keep you posted. 🙂

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  2. Curiosity says:

    Ugh. I’m sure many of us can sympathize with those nights. Thank you for making us smile even as you recounted something so frustrating.

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  3. rachelmeeks says:

    I’ve got a ridgeback too, and he makes that same noise! Heh. I’m so sorry, it was a kind of funny unfortunate series of events, but i know how devastating sleep loss can be. I hope you get some good rest soon.

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    • E. Milo says:

      You have a ridgeback! Yay! I rarely see them (when I used to go to the park). Best dogs ever. Although, mine is having a rough time with my illness ~ if I breathe deeply, gasp, moan, cry, have a “strain” in my voice, he has to sit on my lap to protect me. And he weighs slightly more than I do!

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      • rachelmeeks says:

        Hahaha yeah, my Joey is that way too. But he’s protective because he’s had a rocky past I think. We found him under an overpass with a broken leg. So he’s very cautious and defaults to being terrified of new things.

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      • E. Milo says:

        Maybe it’s a breed thing ~ Bowie (Bowie and Joey haha) is a big ‘fraidy cat. Thunder, fireworks etc. terrify him. But he is also the best guard dog in the world and every day lets me know that he would happily rip the postman’s head off if given the opportunity (although, I think he’d actually just sniff him if we ever opened the gate ~ he’s all bark and no bite).

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      • rachelmeeks says:

        Hahaha that’s actually really comforting! We’re always so worried that Joe is “messed up” but maybe he’s just a timid breed. Either way, we love our boy. 🙂

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