As a mother, you know the feeling. Your head feels heavy. You feel like you have lost the ability to sleep deeply.
A tiny noise wakes you up. Even a small sound makes you jump from your dreams.
If you feel like your brain forgot how to sleep, you are not alone. And importantly—it is not in your head. This is called Postpartum Insomnia. It starts when you have a baby. But often, this problem lasts for decades. It frequently comes back when you enter Perimenopause (the time before menopause).
Why does this happen?
The simple answer is hormones. When your hormones change, your brain goes into “Alert Mode.” It stops “Repair Mode.”
When hormone levels drop (after giving birth or during menopause), your brain cannot stop stress. This is not because you are weak. It is because a “safety switch” in your body is stuck in the ON position.
Maybe you hear a phantom baby crying. Maybe you are over 40 and wake up with a racing heart. The reason is the same.

Why are “Alert Mode” and Hormones Linked?
To understand this, we need to look at brain chemistry. We need to look at how your brain feels “safe.”
1. Nature’s Gift: Progesterone
To fix the problem, we must understand the cause. The main chemical here is called Progesterone.
Progesterone is a hormone that metabolizes into allopregnanolone, a potent neurosteroid that interacts with GABA receptors in the brain. GABA is an inhibitory neurotransmitter. (I will keep this very simple).
Think of pregnancy like a long car trip. When the baby is born, your body runs out of “brake fluid” (Progesterone). Suddenly, your brakes do not work. Your brain goes too fast.
When you go through menopause, the same thing happens. Your supply of “brake fluid” (Progesterone) becomes unstable. Sometimes you have it, sometimes you don’t. This makes your brain feel wild and awake.
We must accept this: Your sleep problems are actually a withdrawal reaction. Your brain is craving the calming effect of Progesterone.
2. Human Nature: Mother’s Love
Long ago, if a mother slept too deeply, she could not hear a wild animal approaching. She could not protect her baby. This is why new moms stay in “Alert Mode.”
Inside your brain, there is a “Fear Center” (the Amygdala). Usually, the thinking part of your brain tells the Fear Center: “Relax, we are safe.”
But when hormones are low, the Fear Center takes control.
Think of it like this: You have a “Night Watchman” in your head. Usually, he is calm. But after childbirth or during menopause, this Watchman acts like he drank 10 cups of coffee. He is too excited. If he hears a tiny sound, he wakes you up.
As described by Dr. Shelby Harris, a behavioral sleep medicine specialist and author of The Women’s Guide to Overcoming Insomnia:”It’s a state of being ‘tired but wired.’ Your body is physically exhausted, but your brain is hyper-aroused and refuses to shut off.”
This is why you feel tight and anxious. You feel like you need to fight a monster, even though no monster is there.
What the Data Says
Studies show that stress makes this worse.
For New Moms: A mother loses 350 to 700 hours of sleep in the first year after birth. This changes your brain. You get less REM sleep. (REM sleep is when your brain heals your emotions).
For Menopause: The “SWAN Study” (a famous health study) shows that as women get older, sleep gets more “broken.”
How to Fix It: Calm Your Brain
You can fix this. It is actually simple. You need to change your environment to help the “Night Watchman” relax.
Here are 3 steps you can do tonight.
1. Fix Your Light
Light is the strongest signal for your body clock. If your brain sees blue light (from phones or TV), it thinks it is daytime. The Watchman stays awake.
Do this: Wear circadian rhythm glasses 2 hours before bed. This blocks the blue light. This lets your brain make Melatonin. Melatonin acts like new “brake fluid.” It helps your body slow down.
2. Fix Your Temperature
A cool body sleeps better.
Do this: Take a hot bath 90 minutes before bed. Keep your bedroom cool (around 65°F or 18°C). When you get out of the hot bath, your body cools down fast. This sends a signal to your brain: “It is time to sleep.”
3. Clear Your Mind
If you worry too much, try this trick.
Do this: Pick a specific time during the day (like 4:00 PM) to be your “Worry Time.” Write all your problems on paper. Do not do this at night in bed.
If you wake up at night, play a simple word game. Pick a word and imagine it. This makes the logical part of your brain tired. It helps you fall back asleep.
Sleep Well, Feel Better
Maybe you just had a baby and you are tired. Maybe you are in mid-life and feel stressed.
These sleep problems are normal. They are not your fault. You are not broken. Your brain is just trying very hard to protect you. But this protection makes you tired.
To sleep deep again, you must understand this. You must take action to calm down that noisy “Night Watchman.”






