Sleep Hygiene in Rehab: A Step Toward Stability

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Revision as of 23:00, 3 December 2025 by Gloirszums (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<html><p> The first nights in rehab rarely feel restful. Even when a person is deeply committed to Drug Recovery or Alcohol Recovery, sleep can turn stubborn and strange. Detox, new routines, shared spaces, unfamiliar sounds, dreaming that swings between vivid and unsettling, a body recalibrating to absence after dependence — it all affects sleep. I have sat with clients at 3 a.m., watched the clock crawl, and learned that one of the kindest things a Rehabilitation tea...")
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The first nights in rehab rarely feel restful. Even when a person is deeply committed to Drug Recovery or Alcohol Recovery, sleep can turn stubborn and strange. Detox, new routines, shared spaces, unfamiliar sounds, dreaming that swings between vivid and unsettling, a body recalibrating to absence after dependence — it all affects sleep. I have sat with clients at 3 a.m., watched the clock crawl, and learned that one of the kindest things a Rehabilitation team can offer is a sLS������