Sleep Disorders

Insomnia in Men & Women: Why Therapy Works When Nothing Else Does

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Updated: October 2025 Ā· Content refined and reorganised for better readability.

Let’s be honest. Almost everyone struggles with sleep at some point.
For some, it’s a restless week before exams or a stressful project at work. For others, insomnia slowly creeps in until sleepless nights feel like the new normal.

Most people start with the usual fixes: a cup of chamomile tea, a stricter bedtime routine, maybe even sleeping pills. Sometimes they help, but often the relief doesn’t last. And when the lights go out, the mind doesn’t.

Modern life makes it worse.

  • Phones buzzing with notifications.
  • Doomscrolling late into the night.
  • Hormonal shifts, parenting stress, or work deadlines that follow you to bed.

Here’s the key insight: insomnia isn’t just about sleep, it’s about what’s happening in your mind and body before, during, and after bedtime.
That’s why therapy works when quick fixes don’t.

Unlike pills or gadgets, therapy treats the root causes of insomnia whether that’s racing thoughts, performance anxiety about sleep, or hormonal and lifestyle changes that pile on with age. Therapy doesn’t just get you through the night; it helps you rebuild a healthier relationship with sleep itself.

At PsychiCare, our Sleep Disorders Counselling & Therapy sessions are designed for men and women who feel like they’ve ā€œtried everythingā€ and still wake up tired. In this article, we’ll unpack:

  • What insomnia really is (beyond ā€œbad sleepā€).
  • Why common fixes often fail.
  • How therapy addresses insomnia differently in men and women.

So if you’ve been wondering why your sleep won’t reset on its own, and what actually works, keep reading.

What Exactly Is Insomnia?

Insomnia isn’t just ā€œbad sleep.ā€
It’s when difficulty falling asleep, staying asleep, or waking up too early becomes a pattern, not just a bad night here and there.

Short-term vs. chronic insomnia

  • Short-term insomnia happens after a stressful week, travel, or illness. It usually passes.
  • Chronic insomnia sticks around for weeks or months. This is the kind that drains your energy, focus, and mood and it rarely fixes itself without support.

Real-world signs you’re not just a ā€œbad sleeperā€:

  • You lie awake for hours even when exhausted.
  • You wake up at 2 or 3 AM and can’t fall back asleep.
  • Your mind races with worries the moment your head hits the pillow.
  • You dread bedtime because you know you’ll just toss and turn.
  • You rely on caffeine to function during the day.

Why it matters:
Poor sleep doesn’t stay in the bedroom. It creeps into your work, relationships, and health. Long-term insomnia raises risks for anxiety, depression, high blood pressure, even memory problems.

Here’s the twist most people miss: insomnia often has less to do with sleep itself and more to do with what’s happening in your mind and body. Stress, hormones, lifestyle, or unresolved emotions all play a role. That’s why therapy is so powerful; it doesn’t just tell you to ā€œgo to bed earlier,ā€ it helps untangle the root causes keeping you awake.

Why Quick Fixes Fail Most People For Insomnia Issues

When sleep starts slipping, most people reach for the obvious fixes. And to be fair, they can help in the short run. But here’s the truth: if insomnia is chronic, these quick fixes rarely hold up.

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1. Sleeping pills

Yes, they can knock you out. But:

  • They don’t address why you can’t sleep.
  • Over time, your body builds tolerance.
  • Side effects creep in – grogginess, dependency, rebound insomnia.

2. Herbal teas and supplement

Chamomile, lavender, melatonin… familiar names.

  • They sometimes help mild, short-term problems.
  • But research shows they’re hit or miss.
  • They don’t touch racing thoughts, anxiety, or stress patterns.

3. Sleep hygiene tips

ā€œGo to bed earlier.ā€
ā€œSwitch off screens.ā€
ā€œKeep your bedroom cool.ā€
These are good habits but for chronic insomnia, they’re like putting a band-aid on a deep cut. You need something that actually heals the wound.

4. The modern wellness trap

You’ve probably seen it online: sleep gadgets, apps, trackers, even ā€œsleepmaxxing.ā€

  • The intention is good – optimise sleep.
  • But often it backfires. People obsess over their sleep score or feel anxious when they don’t hit 8 hours.
  • Instead of calming the mind, it adds more pressure at bedtime.

šŸ‘‰ The real problem isn’t your pillow, your tea, or even your bedtime. The real problem is the loop of stress, thoughts, and body responses keeping you wired when you should be winding down. And that’s where therapy comes in.

Why Therapy Works for Insomnia: The Science Behind It

Why Therapy Works for Insomnia

Most fixes target the symptoms of insomnia. Therapy targets the cause. That’s why psychologists call therapy especially CBT-I (Cognitive Behavioural Therapy for Insomnia), the gold standard treatment.

1. Therapy breaks the ā€œracing thoughtsā€ cycle

Insomnia often starts in the mind. You’re lying there, replaying the day, worrying about tomorrow, or calculating how little sleep you’ll get.

  • CBT-I rewires these thought patterns.
  • Instead of fighting your mind, you learn to relax it.
  • Over time, bedtime feels less like a battle and more like a habit your brain recognises.

2. Therapy retrains your body for healthy sleep

When you toss and turn night after night, your brain starts associating bed with stress.

  • Therapy uses stimulus control (specific strategies to rebuild that bed-sleep connection).
  • It teaches your body to wind down naturally without relying on pills.

3. Therapy reduces sleep anxiety

One of the sneakiest problems? Fear of not sleeping.

  • The more you worry about insomnia, the worse it gets psychologists call this ā€œperformance anxietyā€ about sleep.
  • Therapy techniques like paradoxical intention and mindfulness calm that loop, so your mind stops fighting itself at 2 AM.

4. Therapy works long-term

Pills stop when you stop taking them. Gadgets lose novelty.
But therapy builds skills you keep for life:

  • Managing stress better.
  • Creating flexible sleep habits.
  • Learning how to cope when insomnia tries to creep back.

šŸ‘‰ That’s why therapy is the most effective treatment for insomnia in both men and women. It doesn’t just cover up the problem; it rewires how you sleep.

Insomnia in Women: Causes and Why Therapy Helps

Women experience insomnia at higher rates than men, and it’s rarely ā€œjust stress.ā€
Hormones, life transitions, and emotional load all make women more vulnerable to poor sleep.

Common causes of insomnia in women:

  • Hormonal changes: PMS, pregnancy, perimenopause, and menopause all disrupt sleep. Hot flashes and night sweats are especially tough.
  • Anxiety and depression: Statistically, women are more likely to experience both, and these often show up as sleep problems.
  • Caregiving stress: Balancing children, parents, work, and relationships leaves little space for rest.

Why therapy is so effective for women with insomnia:

  • CBT-I helps manage both the thought patterns and behaviours keeping sleep broken.
  • Therapy addresses emotional health alongside sleep, easing anxiety, low mood, or grief that worsen insomnia.
  • Counselling also validates that sleep issues aren’t ā€œall in your headā€ or ā€œjust hormonesā€; they’re real and treatable.

Insomnia in Men: Causes and Why Therapy Helps

Men often approach insomnia differently. Some push through, others self-medicate, and many delay getting help. The result? Sleep issues linger and spiral.

Common causes of insomnia in men:

  • Work stress & performance pressure: Career demands and financial worries often peak at bedtime.
  • Midlife anxiety: Health concerns, family responsibilities, or identity shifts disrupt sleep.
  • Self-medication: Many men lean on alcohol or overuse sleep aids instead of therapy.

Why therapy is so effective for men with insomnia:

  • Therapy gives men practical, evidence-based tools to break the cycle without dependency.
  • CBT-I is structured and goal-oriented, which appeals to problem-solvers.
  • Therapy helps men manage stress and reframe sleep as a skill, not a weakness.

šŸ‘‰ Bottom line: insomnia looks different in men and women, but therapy is the treatment that works across both. According to Wikipedia, insomnia is one of the most common sleep disorders worldwide, affecting both men and women in different ways.

Modern Triggers of Insomnia: Screens, Social Media, and Wellness Pressure

Insomnia isn’t only about biology or stress at work. In today’s world, new triggers are making sleep harder than ever.

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1. Screen time and social media

  • Blue light plays a role, but it’s not the full story.
  • The real issue? Emotional arousal. Doomscrolling news, comparing yourself on Instagram, or replying to late-night emails keeps the brain in ā€œalertā€ mode.
  • Even if you shut the phone off, your mind is still wired.

2. Work from home and blurred boundaries

  • Laptops on the bed, checking Slack at midnight, no clear line between work and rest.
  • Your brain struggles to switch gears, so sleep suffers.

3. Wellness culture and ā€œsleep anxietyā€

  • Ever heard of orthosomnia? It’s anxiety about not sleeping enough.
  • Fitness trackers, sleep apps, and ā€œsleepmaxxingā€ trends make some people more stressed about their sleep score than their actual rest.
  • Instead of relaxing, bedtime becomes another performance test.

4. Health anxieties in the post-COVID era

  • Worries about immunity, long COVID, or future illness.
  • Many people report waking up at 2–3 AM with health fears that spiral.
  • Therapy helps break that cycle of night-time rumination.

šŸ‘‰ These modern insomnia triggers are part of why traditional advice (ā€œdrink warm milkā€ or ā€œgo to bed earlierā€) falls flat. Therapy is different: it helps you tackle both the old and the new causes of sleepless nights.

Types of Therapy That Treat Insomnia

When insomnia drags on, therapy does what pills and quick fixes can’t: it retrains both the mind and the body to sleep again. Here are the main approaches used in therapy for insomnia in men and women:

1. CBT-I (Cognitive Behavioural Therapy for Insomnia)

  • Gold-standard treatment recommended worldwide.
  • Focuses on breaking unhelpful thought patterns (ā€œI’ll never sleep tonightā€) and behaviours (lying in bed scrolling).
  • Includes techniques like stimulus control, sleep restriction, and cognitive restructuring.
  • Works long-term because it teaches your brain to associate bed with rest again.

2. Mindfulness and relaxation therapy

  • Targets the ā€œracing thoughtsā€ that spike at night.
  • Uses guided breathing, meditation, and body scans to calm the nervous system.
  • Especially effective for people who wake at 2–3 AM and can’t switch their brain off.

3. Stress and anxiety counselling

  • Many sleep issues aren’t just about bedtime, they’re rooted in daily worries.
  • Counselling helps process stressors (work, family, health) so they don’t hijack your nights.
  • For women, it can also address hormonal changes; for men, the pressure to ā€œtough it out.ā€

4. Couples counselling for sleep issues

  • Sometimes insomnia is made worse by snoring partners, mismatched schedules, or relationship stress.
  • Therapy gives couples tools to manage sleep together instead of suffering in silence.

šŸ‘‰ Unlike pills, which stop working once you stop taking them, therapy for insomnia builds lifelong skills. Whether you’re a woman navigating menopause or a man juggling work stress, therapy adapts to your life stage and challenges.

When to Seek Professional Help for Insomnia

Everyone has the odd rough night. But if insomnia keeps showing up, it’s time to stop treating it like a ā€œphaseā€ and get support.

Signs you should see a therapist for insomnia:

  • Sleep issues last more than 3 weeks. Short-term insomnia often passes. Chronic insomnia usually doesn’t.
  • You wake up tired most days. If your mornings feel as exhausting as your nights, that’s a red flag.
  • You dread bedtime. Anxiety about sleep itself is a classic sign that therapy is needed.
  • Daytime life is suffering. Struggling at work, snapping at family, or losing focus are all downstream effects.
  • Pills or hacks haven’t worked. If teas, supplements, or apps haven’t solved it, you need a deeper solution.

When to see a doctor vs when to see a therapist for sleep problems:

  • See a doctor if you suspect sleep apnea, restless legs, or another medical condition.
  • See a therapist if stress, anxiety, depression, or life transitions are fueling your insomnia. Often, both work hand in hand.

šŸ‘‰ Therapy doesn’t just treat the symptoms of insomnia. It gives you strategies you can use for lifeĀ  so sleep stops being something you chase and becomes something your body naturally does again.

For personalised guidance, explore our Sleep Disorders Counselling & Therapy sessions.

Conclusion: Insomnia Is Treatable – Therapy Makes the Difference

Sleepless nights can feel endless. One week turns into a month, and soon you start believing this is ā€œjust how life is now.ā€ But insomnia isn’t something you have to live with. It’s a treatable condition and therapy is the treatment that actually lasts.

For women, therapy can ease the hormonal shifts and emotional load that disturb sleep. For men, it offers practical strategies to handle stress without depending on pills or alcohol. And for anyone caught in the loop of racing thoughts, 3 AM wake-ups, or sleep anxiety, therapy provides proven tools to reset your relationship with sleep.

The bottom line? Insomnia is not a life sentence.
With the right approach, restful nights and better days are possible.

If you’ve tried quick fixes and nothing has worked, this is the time to take the next step. At PsychiCare, our Sleep Disorders Counselling & Therapy sessions are designed to help men and women across all ages overcome insomnia at the root. Confidential, expert-led, and accessible online worldwide.

šŸ‘‰ Don’t wait for another night of tossing and turning. The sooner you start therapy, the sooner you start sleeping.

FAQs on Insomnia and Therapy

Q1. Why do I wake up at 3 AM every night?
Waking at 3 AM is a common insomnia pattern. For many, it’s linked to anxiety, stress, or hormone shifts that trigger early waking. Sometimes it’s a sign your mind hasn’t fully switched off, even though your body is tired. Therapy helps identify the trigger and retrain your sleep cycle so those 3 AM wake-ups don’t become a nightly habit.

Q2. Can therapy really cure insomnia?
Yes – therapy, especially CBT-I, is considered the most effective treatment for chronic insomnia. Unlike pills that work only while you take them, therapy helps you change the thought patterns and habits that keep insomnia alive. For many men and women, it feels less like a ā€œcureā€ and more like regaining control over sleep for the long-term.

Q3. Is insomnia different in men and women?
It can be. Women often experience insomnia linked to hormonal changes (PMS, pregnancy, menopause), while men are more likely to connect it to work stress or self-medication habits. Therapy adapts to these differences whether it’s addressing emotional load in women or stress coping in men.

Q4. Do I need a therapist or a doctor for sleep problems?
It depends on the cause. If sleep apnea, restless legs, or other medical conditions are suspected, start with a doctor. But if insomnia is fuelled by stress, anxiety, or lifestyle patterns, a therapist trained in CBT-I is the right choice. Many people benefit from a mix of both.

Q5. How long does therapy for insomnia take to work?
Many people start noticing improvements within a few weeks. A full course of CBT-I usually runs 6–8 sessions, though it varies depending on personal needs. The best part? Once you learn the techniques, you can use them for life.

Author

  • Ms. Tilottama Khandelwal

    Written by Ms. Tilottama Khandelwal, an RCI Licensed Clinical Psychologist with specialised expertise in child and adolescent mental health. She is dedicated to supporting young individuals and families through evidence-based therapy, helping them navigate emotional, behavioural, and developmental challenges with care and compassion.

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