The Independent on Saturday

As I lay me down to lie awake

- PHILIPPA MARTYR THE CONVERSATI­ON Martyr is a lecturer in pharmacolo­gy at the Women's Health, School of Biomedical Sciences, University of Western Australia

FRENCH author Marie Darrieusse­cq writes in her 2023 memoir Sleepless: “The world is divided into those who can sleep and those who can’t.”

It’s a big call. But insomnia is a well-recorded preoccupat­ion in history. It includes difficulty falling asleep, or staying asleep, and comes with daytime distress and anxiety.

There are many, varied reasons why people have insomnia. These include biological changes as we age or because of our hormones, physical or mental health issues, medicines we take, as well as how and where we live and work.

Sleep deprivatio­n is a form of torture. Roman consul Marcus Atilius Regulus is allegedly the first person in recorded history to die of insomnia.

In about 256 BCE, he was handed over to Rome’s enemies, the Carthagini­ans, who apparently tortured him to death. They did this by amputating his eyelids and forcing him to stare at the sun.

As horrible as this sounds, the legend doesn’t stand up. There are no reliable accounts of how Regulus died. Even though sleep deprivatio­n may not have killed Regulus, it continues to be used in many countries today.

One of the best early descriptio­ns of insomnia is by English clergyman Robert Burton in his book The Anatomy of Melancholy (1628).

Burton knew insomnia was a cause and a symptom of depression. He also recommende­d avoiding eating cabbage, which “causeth troublesom­e dreams” and not going to bed straight after eating the evening meal.

But we need to look at industrial­isation – when a country moves from mostly farming to mostly manufactur­ing using machinery – for clues to the level of insomnia we see today.

In countries without industrial­isation, insomnia is rare. Only around 1-2% of the population will experience it. Compare this with modern UK, where the estimated insomnia rates are 10-48%, depending on the study. A 2021 report said 14.8% of Australian­s had symptoms meeting criteria for chronic (long-term) insomnia.

As Western countries modernised, things we now associate with insomnia became part of people’s lives. These include artificial lighting and clocks. There was also more ambient noise, and changes in diet and housing. Our sleep habits shifted as a result of this new way of living and working.

At around the same time, the Enlightenm­ent era of flourishin­g new sciences in the late 18th century gave us the term “insomnia” and where there is “insomnia”, there must be “insomniacs”. “Insomniacs” became a diagnostic term for people struggling with sleep.

Medical cures for insomnia began to spread – some of them probably

effective. For example, in the 19th century Grimault & Co’s “Indian Cigarettes” were advertised in Australia. They contained cannabis.

The 19th century was also the birthplace of modern medical ideas about anxiety, which we now know can cause insomnia.

Romanian philosophe­r Emil Cioran (1911-1995) had chronic insomnia. His 1934 book, On the Heights of Despair (the title speaks for itself), describes the loneliness and isolation of insomnia – the feeling of being cut off from the rest of humanity.

Many famous modern writers and artists had insomnia that it’s now almost a cliché. Victor Hugo, Franz Kafka, Marcel Proust and Ernest Hemingway all struggled with sleeplessn­ess.

In Hemingway’s short story, Now I Lay Me, his soldier narrator and alterego says: “I myself did not want to sleep because I had been living for a long time with the knowledge that if I shut my eyes in the dark and let myself go, my soul would go out of my body.”

It’s also no coincidenc­e the first barbiturat­e drugs were discovered in this era. Barbital, marketed as veronal, was just one of a range of new drugs that promised easy sleep.

The drugs made people relaxed and sleepy by switching on the body’s gamma-aminobutyr­ic acid (Gaba) system. This part of our nervous system works to inhibit processes in the body that would otherwise keep us awake. But the drugs can inhibit the processes too much. Suicides and accidental deaths by sleeping pill overdose became sadly common in the following decades.

The famous home encycloped­ia, Enquire Within Upon Everything, provided a scientific-sounding cure for insomnia: “Nervous persons, who are troubled with wakefulnes­s and excitabili­ty, usually have a strong tendency of blood on the brain, with cold extremitie­s. The pressure of the blood on the brain keeps it in a stimulated or wakeful state … rise and chafe the body and extremitie­s with a brush or towel, or rub smartly with the hands to promote circulatio­n, and withdraw the excessive amount of blood from the brain, and they will fall asleep in a few moments. A cold bath, or a sponge bath and rubbing … will aid in equalising circulatio­n and promoting sleep.”

Now, “sleep hygiene” means something different to taking a cold bath. It’s the process of quieting your body and mind before bedtime.

In this century, Western living has added two new sleep disturbers to the mix. We drink huge amounts of caffeine and go to bed with handheld devices – with their bright lights and constant dopamine hits that stimulate us and stop us sleeping.

Our problems with insomnia show no signs of going away. This is partly because our economy is increasing­ly organised around sleep-depriving work. In the US, production workers are the most likely to have sleep disorders, possibly because of shift work.

If the global insomnia market is anything to go by, insomnia is big business and getting bigger, projected to reach $6.3 billion (R120bn) by 2030. |

 ?? Museum, London, CC BY-SA | Science ?? VERONAL was one of a range of new drugs that promised easy sleep.
Museum, London, CC BY-SA | Science VERONAL was one of a range of new drugs that promised easy sleep.
 ?? ?? INSOMNIA is a well-recorded preoccupat­ion in history.
INSOMNIA is a well-recorded preoccupat­ion in history.

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