info > Addictive Behaviors > Sleeping Addiction Sleeping Addiction
Many people may feel that they genuinely have a sleep addiction. They feel that they think about sleeping constantly, they sleep for lengthy periods of time and they find it interferes sufficiently with the rest of their lives to be a problem.
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The first thing that needs to be considered when struggling with a
problem like this is the possibility that it may have a physical cause.
There are several disorders and conditions that cause extreme and
chronic fatigue. Mononucleosis can persist in the body and cause severe
fatigue. Check out the symptom profile for illnesses like Chronic
Fatigue Syndrome where the need for excessive amounts of sleep is one
of the main symptoms.
An addiction to sleep, if there is such a thing, rarely causes the kind
of harm to others that is an element in all other addictions. Few
people are damaged by a loved ones desire to sleep for long periods of
time though it may be mildly disruptive and worrying.
It is true that the chronic sleeper may long for the next sleep, may
even obsess about it, but the actual act of sleeping is not in fact
harmful to the body unless extended periods of inactivity could be
construed as being harmful.
Normally the person most aware of the possibility of a sleep compulsion
is the sleeper themselves rather than those around her. He or she may
be concerned that they may not be able to stay awake long enough to
fulfill their obligations and duties or maintain relationships. For
this reason it is important to investigate the possibility of some
physiological disorder.
If this is found to be untrue then the next step should be
psychotherapy in an effort to see if there are some underlying
psychological problems causing the person to use sleep as a kind of
escape from the world and all of its demands.
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