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Before the
mastectomy, chronic seroma, radiation, hormonal therapy, and all its side effects, I used to sleep like a baby.

Today, if I get more than
three hours of sleep in a night, I see it as a miracle. Fatigue has become my constant companion, and the brain fog that follows me through each day feels like a veil I can never lift.

Accepting the truth has been difficult. I used to believe that responsible compliance—trusting experts, following their advice, and trusting the medical system—was the right approach, but it ended up costing me my health and making my life a nightmare!
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It is the reason my body was mutilated, and it left me battling a host of lasting conditions, including relentless, chronic insomnia.

I deal with this chronic condition every night, which causes
severe fatigue, distress, and tension that greatly impact my daily life.

During a recent conversation with a friend, I realized how stressed I feel about daily routines, like planning meals or organizing a Christmas celebration that’s still months away.

Without proper sleep,
fatigue and brain fog make it extremely hard even to handle the simple routines.
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Routines I used to handle easily are now making it even harder to relax and have a peaceful night’s sleep. Insomnia and stress create a vicious cycle that feeds on itself.

When people talk about insomnia, they often imagine a stressful week or too much caffeine before bed.

For those of us living with
chronic insomnia tied to an underlying health condition, the reality is far more isolating and exhausting.

It’s not a choice or
a simple habit to fix; it’s a relentless symptom, a side effect of a core battle our body is already fighting.

For six years, I have treated my insomnia as a villain. I have tried everything that would not trigger an allergic reaction: sleep mask, meditation, cutting out screens, and blackout curtains.

Some nights, I feel like I've achieved a small victory by getting four to five hours of sleep, but most nights I lie there, wide awake, trapped in a cycle of frustration and fatigue.

What I've learned is that my sleeplessness isn't an isolated issue.
It's a direct, painful ripple effect of an underlying condition (or conditions) that keeps my body in a constant state of alert, pain, or dysregulation.
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If you live with chronic pain like I do, the pain itself is a relentless sleep disruptor. My body can't relax enough to enter the deep, restorative stages of sleep.

When you have an autoimmune or inflammatory disorder, like I do, the internal war raging in your system increases certain chemicals and hormones, making rest impossible.

If, like me, you deal with anxiety or PTSD related to medical trauma,
your nervous system may be stuck in a "fight or flight" mode, convinced it needs to stay awake to survive.
Insomnia, in this context, acts as a symptom of a symptom. It’s a relentless, harsh reminder that your body isn't at peace.

The most damaging part of chronic, underlying-condition-driven insomnia is
the vicious cycle, which creates:

Sleep Deprivation: We lose precious restorative sleep.

Increased Symptoms: The lack of sleep exacerbates the underlying condition. Pain intensifies, inflammation flares, and anxiety spikes
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Worsened Insomnia: The intensified symptoms make it even harder to fall asleep the next night.

It becomes a self-perpetuating loop that drags down every aspect of my life—cognitive function, emotional resilience, and the sheer energy needed to manage the existing health challenges.

The emotional toll is immense: the feeling of being perpetually behind, always operating at a deficit, and knowing that the
cure for the sleeplessness often lies in managing the difficult health condition first.
After recognizing the devastating connection between my chronic insomnia and the medical criminal negligence by Sophiahemmet's Christinakliniken and its staff that has underpinned all these health issues, the focus often shifts to seeking accountability for the medical errors, delays, negligence, and the loss of my file and complete records, which allowed the cancer to metastasize.

You are not failing because you can't sleep. Your body is working overtime, and the insomnia is a siren call telling you that your primary health battle needs attention.

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