When Grief Won't Let You Sleep:
The 4-7-8 Breathing Trick That Actually Helps
A free, simple technique — no cleared mind required.
Sleep and I have never been friends.
I can fall asleep at the drop of a hat. Unfortunately, sometimes that hat drops at wildly inappropriate moments — mid-afternoon, mid-conversation, or when I'm just a little bored. But staying asleep has always been the real challenge. Anxiety made sure of that.
And in the last five years, anxiety has had plenty of material to work with.
Both of my parents were sick and dying at the same time. One was slipping away slowly through dementia, while the other battled what felt like everything else all at once. Add unstable work, shaky finances, complicated relationships, and the quiet realization that only some of your people are truly solid — and suddenly your nervous system is running the show.
When anxiety loosens its grip, depression steps in like an understudy who has been waiting patiently in the wings.
If you are grieving, this may sound painfully familiar.
Grief and Sleep: A Brutal Combination
Loss does not just hurt your heart. It hijacks your body.
In the middle of grief, insomnia, anxiety, and depression are not side effects. They are part of the experience. Your mind replays conversations. Your chest feels tight. Your body is exhausted, but your thoughts refuse to clock out.
I have tried a lot of things over the years:
- Getting up and pacing the room
- Taking a shower in the middle of the night, hoping warm water might reset something
- Distracting myself by getting up and doing something — anything
- Avoiding looking at the time or my phone, because nothing good ever comes from knowing it is three fourteen a.m.
- Lying there bargaining with the universe
- And yes, sometimes carefully using doctor-prescribed medication
Some things help sometimes. But the one tool that has been the most consistently helpful for me is 4-7-8 breathing.
It is simple. It is free. And it does not require you to clear your mind — which, frankly, is an unreasonable request at two in the morning.
The 4-7-8 Breathing Method
One cycle. Four seconds in. Seven seconds held. Eight seconds out. That is all.
Repeat four times to start. You can do more if it feels good, but even a few rounds can make a noticeable difference. This breathing pattern signals to your nervous system that you are not in danger. Your heart rate slows. Your body softens. The panic dial turns down a notch.
You do not have to believe in it.
You just have to do it.
Pair It With a Gentle Mental Shift
After a few rounds of breathing, I try to guide my mind somewhere quieter.
Not forced meditation. Not perfect stillness.
Let your mind drift somewhere safe.
It does not need to be elaborate. It does not need to be real. Just somewhere that feels calm.
- A beach, a porch, or a room with soft light
- A childhood memory where nothing bad was happening yet
- Sometimes just darkness and calm — nothing at all
If your mind wanders, that is okay. Gently bring it back. No scolding. No "you are doing it wrong." You are not trying to erase grief. You are trying to rest inside it.
Sleep Will Not Fix Everything. But It Helps You Survive.
This breathing technique will not take the grief away. It will not undo the loss. It will not magically solve anxiety or depression.
But it can help you get enough rest to live and fight another day. And sometimes, especially in grief, that is the win.
If sleep has been elusive for you, know this: you are not broken. Your body is responding to pain. Be gentle with it. Give it tools. And when sleep finally finds you, let it.
You have earned the rest.
Let yourself take it.Michelle Tompkins
Michelle is the author of the Holding Space series and has spent more than a decade helping people navigate grief, loss, and the sleepless nights that come with both. She is not a therapist or a sleep specialist — just someone who has been awake at three fourteen a.m. and found a few things that actually help.
You don't have to carry grief alone — or wide awake.
From honest books and grief journals to personalized writing support, there are tools here built for the hardest moments. Including the ones that happen at two in the morning.
