Coping with tiredness during pregnancy

Lucy WolfeLucy Wolfe is Paediatric sleep consultant and mum of four at Sleep Matters-Help Your Child Sleep; a private sleep consulting practice, based in Cork, where she enjoys providing knowledge, expertise and valuable support with tailored sleep plans to families across the country and over-seas, without using cry intensive methods. Author of The Baby Sleep Solution. www.sleepmatters.ie

Pregnancy

The tiredness that you experience when you are pregnant may be different to any tiredness that you have ever experienced before now. It is actually totally different to how you may feel after your baby is born and you may be frustrated that during a time when you expect to be vibrant and full of energy, in fact the opposite is true. I have experienced this with all of my own pregnancies and that veil of tiredness coupled with sickness can make you miserable, but it doesn’t last forever and the end result is amazing!

This overwhelming tiredness may be experienced at the start of your pregnancy and then for the middle trimester you may feel great and then as your body becomes bigger towards the final trimester you may begin to feel worn out and also have trouble either getting to sleep or staying asleep. 

During this time, there is nothing for it except to become attuned to what your body is telling you as begin to grow your very own human being! Self-care is so important. Here are a few tips:

Be mindful that your lifestyle; diet, fitness regime, use of television, phones, iPads, medication for example, has a huge impact on your sleep. Make adjustments that you feel might help.

Make sure your bedroom is a sanctuary and that the clothes that you wear for sleep are comfortable and cool. Your body temperature will be higher when you are pregnant and that can make sleeping more difficult, so adjust your bedding and room temperature accordingly.

If you are struggling to sleep then there is one school of thought that suggests you should get up again if you are not asleep or back to sleep within 30 minutes, then get up, distract yourself with music or reading and then try again. But this can often make your sleep more fractured and train your body to get into a negative sleep cycle. Another effective approach may be to continue to stay in bed, so that you are at least resting, but resist the urge to over worry about anything that may stress you out. Practising mindfulness can help you acknowledge your stressors but also bat them away and focus on the moment and your breathing and surroundings and not the time on the clock or what you have to do tomorrow and how little sleep you are getting.