Why You Can’t Sleep After Someone Dies
Why can’t I sleep after someone dies?
If sleep has felt impossible since someone died, you’re not imagining it.
Many grieving people struggle with sleep issues, either falling asleep, staying asleep, or both, even if they’ve never had sleep problems before. You might feel exhausted all day, only to lie awake at night. Your mind replays conversations. The house feels too quiet. The bed feels different. Nights stretch longer than they used to.
If this sounds familiar, you’re not alone.
In Episode 22 of The GRIEF Ladies Podcast, we talk openly about why sleep becomes so disrupted after loss and what you can actually do about it.
Why Does Grief Make Sleep So Hard?
After someone dies, everything shifts: your routines, your sense of safety, even your daily rhythms. Nighttime can amplify the absence. There are fewer distractions. More silence. More space for thoughts to wander.
In this episode, we explore:
Why grief impacts sleep
Why nights tend to feel more intense
The difference between temporary sleep disruption and longer-term insomnia
What’s normal (and what’s common) after a loss
Practical Tools You Can Try Tonight
This isn’t just a conversation about why sleep is hard; it’s about what might help.
In this episode, you’ll hear:
Gentle wind-down strategies that don’t feel overwhelming
Simple shifts that make your sleep space feel more supportive
Small rituals that can ease nighttime intensity
Practical ideas you can experiment with right away
No unrealistic advice. No pressure to “fix” your grief. Just real conversation and doable steps.
Grounding When Everything Feels Disrupted
This episode connects to the Grounding trail marker in our GRIEF Framework — focusing on small, steady practices that help you feel more stable when everything feels off balance.
If your days feel foggy and your nights feel long, this conversation is for you.
🎙 Listen to Episode 22: Why You Can’t Sleep After Someone Dies (Grief & Insomnia Explained)
Available now on YouTube and all podcast platforms.
If sleep has been one of the hardest parts of your grief, we hope this episode feels like someone sitting beside you in the dark offering understanding and something practical to try.