Can You Train Your Brain To Sleep Well Again?

Written by:

The Stellar Sleep Team

Medical review by:

Robert Stevens, MD

If you’re suffering from insomnia, not sleeping well seems so ingrained into your mind’s natural state – can you train your brain to sleep well again?

If you’ve ever felt like your brain or body has forgotten how to sleep, you’re not alone. When insomnia becomes chronic, it can feel like something inside your head  has shifted. Even when you lie down exhausted, your thoughts start racing, your body cannot relax, and sleep feels completely unattainable.

Your brain hasn’t forgotten how to sleep; it just needs the right conditions to fall back into a healthy sleeping state. In this article, we’ll explore how your brain adapts over time, what causes insomnia, and how you can retrain your brain to sleep naturally again without relying on medication or guesswork.

The Science Behind How Your Brain Adapts

You’ve probably heard people say the brain is “hardwired,” but that doesn’t reflect how it truly works. In reality, the brain is constantly changing. Throughout your life, your brain is able to reshape itself to  build new connections based on your behavior and experiences. This process is known as neuroplasticity.

Neuroplasticity refers to your brain’s ability to form new connections in response to experiences, habits, and thoughts. According to Harvard Medical School, this is how we continue learning and adjusting, whether we are picking up a new skill, recovering from stress, or shifting into a different routine.

This same process applies to sleep. If your sleep has gradually changed, it’s likely your brain adjusted to the patterns you’ve been following. For example, you may have developed habits that signal your brain to stay alert and awake when it should be winding down. However, the good news is that if your brain learns one set of sleep behaviors, it can learn another, healthier one.

Training Your Brain To Sleep Well Again

Insomnia can seem to appear  out of nowhere, but most of the time, it develops gradually. It often starts with a stressful event, such as a major life change or illness, that throws off your sleep pattern. This is usually followed by negative coping strategies: going to bed early to “get ahead,” sleeping in to make up for lost rest, or lying in bed awake trying to fall asleep while feeling anxious about the next day.

These actions may seem harmless, but they send mixed signals to your brain. Over time, they teach the brain to expect wakefulness in bed rather than sleep. So, what started as a temporary issue becomes a learned pattern.

The encouraging part is that this same process can work in your favor. Just as your brain learned to associate your bed with stress, it can learn to associate it with rest once again. The shift occurs once you interrupt old habits and replace them with new ones that are sleep-supportive. 

Unlearning habits of chronic insomnia starts with understanding the patterns that keep insomnia persistent. Next, it’s about building a consistent routine, addressing the thoughts that arise at  bedtime, and slowly restoring trust in your body’s ability to sleep on its own.

Why a Structured Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Insomnia (CBT-I) Program Works

You might be wondering, “Can’t I just try a few tips I find online?” While there’s plenty of quality advice out there, trying to self-treat insomnia with scattered suggestions often leads to more frustration with less success.

For example, one blog might tell you to go to bed at 9 PM, while another advises you  to stay up until midnight. Some suggest supplements, while others say to ditch and not use them. The inconsistency of information can make it feel like nothing works, which reinforces the hopelessness that often accompanies insomnia.

CBT-I works differently because it’s:

  • Evidence-based. Backed by science, not like short-lived fads
  • Personalized. Tailored to your individual sleep habits
  • Structured. Built around a proven sequence of strategies that continue to build on each other

 

A good CBT-I program goes beyond simply giving you a checklist. It helps you understand the “why” behind each strategy and gives you the tools to stick with it, even when it seems difficult .

Common CBT-I Techniques That Retrain the Brain

CBT-I works through several key techniques that come together to shift how you approach sleep. Each technique plays a role in helping you build new habits, in addition to changing the way your mind and body respond at night. 

Here are some of the main components of CBT-I:

  • Stimulus Control: Teaches your brain to associate your bed with sleep instead of wakefulness by breaking the habit of staying in bed while anxious or alert.
  • Sleep Restriction Therapy (SRT): Limits time in bed to match your actual sleep time,  reducing sleep pressure and time spent awake in bed.
  • Cognitive Restructuring: Helps identify and reframe unhelpful thoughts like “I’ll never sleep without pills” or “If I don’t sleep tonight, tomorrow will be ruined.”
  • Relaxation Techniques: Introduces calming practices that reduce alertness  before bed. These relaxation techniques include deep breathing, progressive muscle relaxation, or guided imagery.
  • Sleep Hygiene Education: Covers the basics for  a sleep-supportive environment, like limiting caffeine, managing light exposure, and creating consistency.

 

Each of these techniques plays a role in reshaping your relationship with sleep, and together, they will retrain your brain.

What Makes CBT-I Different From Other Approaches?

Most sleep aids or supplements focus on forcing your body to sleep; however,  CBT-I doesn’t rely on these kinds of quick fixes. Instead, CBT-I  focuses on helping your body remember how to sleep naturally.

This is an important difference. Sleep aids can leave you feeling groggy or make it harder to stop using them, causing your sleep to get worse once you stop their use. The National Institutes of Health advises against relying on sleep aids for long-term use since they don’t fix the cause of the problem.

CBT-I, on the other hand, teaches skills you can use for your lifetime. It’s not a quick fix, but a long-term solution designed to promote confidence in your ability to sleep, as opposed to  fear, worry, or dependency.

 

But What If I’ve Tried Everything?

That’s a common concern. Many people who begin CBT-I feel skeptical over this approach since  nothing else has worked. But unlike generic advice or temporary fixes, CBT-I is based on how the brain actually functions 

CBT-I uses the science of neuroplasticity to make a difference for your advantage.

When you apply consistent strategies to create strong associations between your bed and sleep, your brain begins to adapt:  you  fall asleep faster, you wake up fewer times in the night, you begin to feel rested once again. These are all signs that your brain is rewiring itself for rest.

And once this shift occurs, it tends to stick because your brain has truly learned a new, healthier sleep pattern.

 

What You Can Do Next

If you’re stuck in a cycle of broken sleep, the first step is knowing that it can change and that you can retrain your brain. You don’t have to live at the mercy of  sleepless nights and groggy mornings.

Here’s how you can get started:

  • Track your sleep: For a few days, jot down when you go to bed, how long it takes to fall asleep, how often you wake up, and what time you rise. This helps identify patterns.
  • Learn more about CBT-I: Understand what it involves and why each technique matters.
  • Stick to a consistent wake-up time: This is one of the most powerful ways to reset your body clock.
  • Limit time in bed to actual sleep time: This strengthens your brain’s connection between your bed and restful sleep 

 

Final Thoughts

The bottom line is that when you’ve dealt with prolonged insomnia, it’s easy to feel stuck. However, your brain is capable of change. With the right tools and structured program, your brain can relearn how to sleep; you don’t have to rely on quick fixes or guess your way through the process. There is a clear path forward, and it starts by understanding how your habits and thoughts shape your sleep. Once you do, you can begin to rebuild trust in your body’s ability to rest, one night at a time.

Sources:

Jennifer Fisher, MMSc, PA-C. Tips to leverage neuroplasticity to maintain cognitive fitness as you age. Harvard Health, 2025.

Puderbaugh M, Emmady PD. Neuroplasticity. In: StatPearls. StatPearls Publishing

Mitchell MD, Gehrman P, Perlis M, et al. Comparative effectiveness of cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia: a systematic review. BMC Fam Pract. 2012

Medical review: Robert Stevens, MD

Dr. Robert Stevens is a retired medical doctor based in Phoenix, Arizona. He obtained his Bachelor of Science from Union College (NY), received his MD from New York Medical College, and completed his internship in internal medicine at a Yale-affiliated hospital. Dr. Stevens practiced urgent care and occupational medicine for over 20 years in both Phoenix and Los Angeles.

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