You’ve probably searched it countless times.
“Why can’t I sleep?”
You might have tried blue-light glasses. Melatonin. White noise. Meditation apps.
And still, the fog remains. The fatigue. The 3 a.m. spiral that feels like it will never end.
As an NHS GP, I hear this story every week.
But here’s something I often say to patients.
Maybe sleep itself isn’t the real problem.
Sleep Is a System. And That System Is Often Misaligned.
Modern life doesn’t support rest. In fact, it works against it:
Bright lights after sunset
Phones in bed
Caffeine far too late in the day
Stress and worry that follow us under the duvet
Sleep isn’t just a switch that flips when you’re tired.
It’s a series of transitions. It’s a physiological rhythm. And when that rhythm gets disrupted, we can’t just “try harder” to sleep.
The result?
You lie in bed, physically exhausted, mentally alert, frustrated, and unsure what to do.
You’re Not Broken. But the World Around You Might Be.
The truth is, you’re not lazy, or doing it wrong, or lacking willpower.
Most of us were simply never taught how to support sleep in the world we live in now.
In the clinic, I often share strategies that go beyond pills or quick fixes.
Simple things like:
Honouring wind-down routines
Resetting light exposure in the morning
Being kinder to the body when it doesn’t “perform” on cue
Real rest isn’t something you force.
It’s something you create conditions for.
Final Thought
If your sleep has been stuck for months, or even years,
Know that you’re not alone. And you’re not imagining it.
There is a better way forward.
And it starts with understanding sleep not as a failure of effort, but as a signal that something deeper needs your attention.
Until sleep feels natural again, Dr Noaman.

