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What this is
When intrusive thoughts keep showing up at night, fighting or pushing them away usually makes them rebound stronger. Instead, this practice uses gentle cognitive defusion: you acknowledge the thought first (so it doesn't have to fight to be heard), then kindly set it aside for later. Each thought becomes a small drifting cloud you label and release — not deleted, just allowed to float off on its own soft current. It is a calm, sleep-safe way to let a busy mind settle.
Use this when
- Your mind won't switch off at bedtime
- The same worry or to-do keeps circling back
- You replay conversations or what-ifs in the dark
- Trying to "stop thinking" only makes it louder
What you'll experience
Stops the Struggle
Acknowledging beats suppressing, so thoughts fade faster
Sleep-Safe
Calm and dim — designed to help you drift off
Gentle Release
Let thoughts float away instead of forcing them out
Built for Returns
Normalizes coming back, so there is no frustration
Keep in mind
- A self-help cognitive defusion exercise, not therapy or diagnosis.
- If racing thoughts feel overwhelming most nights, please see a professional.
- Use in low light; avoid bright screens before sleep.
- If you ever feel unsafe, pause and reach a helpline.
This is a self-help exercise based on recognised cognitive defusion and worry-postponement techniques. It does not diagnose, treat, or replace professionals or emergency services. Everything you do stays only on your device and is never uploaded.