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In this video, I explore sleep from a psychoanalytic lens and unpack how insomnia may be more than just a “sleep problem.” We begin with object permanence and early childhood development, how an infant’s first experiences of separation (especially from the mother) shape the emotional meaning of sleep. If absence once felt like abandonment, sleep itself can unconsciously carry anxiety. I also discuss the clinical definition of insomnia (difficulty sleeping at least three nights a week for three months) and why the first step should not always be medication. Before prescribing pills, we must explore routine, lifestyle, anxiety, depression, trauma, and unresolved psychological conflicts. Sleep is perhaps the most honest thing we do. When we sleep, ego defenses soften. Dreams emerge. Control drops. If someone struggles with insomnia, we might ask: • Is there a fear of losing control? • Is perfectionism keeping the mind hyper-vigilant? • Is there guilt, anger, or grief that hasn’t been metabolized? • Is letting go itself frightening? Sleep can feel like a symbolic death — a temporary disappearance of the self. In films like The Machinist, insomnia reflects unbearable guilt and fear of annihilation. From a psychoanalytic perspective, sleep requires trust — in the environment, in others, and in one’s own internal world. When we reduce sleep only to brain waves and neurochemistry, we may miss its deeper psychological meaning. True rest happens when the mind stops its constant negotiation between id, ego, and superego. This video invites you to look beyond physiology and ask: What does sleep mean for you? #Insomnia #Psychoanalysis #SleepPsychology #MentalHealth #ObjectPermanence #Anxiety #Therapy