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How to Sleep When Your Mind Won’t Switch Off

January 27, 20264 min read

How to Sleep When Your Mind Won’t Switch Off

Sphere Wellness explains how to get sleep when you are stressed

Waking up in the middle of the night with a racing mind is one of the most frustrating parts of poor sleep. You lie there, heart racing, replaying conversations, to-dos and worries, and no matter how much you want to drift back to sleep, your thoughts just won’t quieten. For many people in Australia, this is a familiar pattern: about 40 % of adults regularly experience poor sleep, and stress is one of the biggest contributors to that struggle. Poor sleep doesn’t just make us tired — it affects our mood, our memory, and our ability to manage stress the next day, creating a vicious cycle of sleeplessness and overwhelm.

A racing mind at night often comes down to how we’ve lived during the day. When life is busy, fast-paced, and full of demands, our nervous system rarely gets a chance to downshift before bedtime. Thoughts that weren’t processed earlier in the day tend to resurface when the body is lying still and the lights are off. This is where understanding the connection between movement, stress regulation, and sleep quality becomes essential. Australian research shows that how we structure our day — especially how active we are — directly impacts the quality of our sleep. A world-first study from the University of South Australia found that adults with higher levels of moderate-to-vigorous physical activity reported less troubled sleep, better sleep quality and reduced tiredness compared to less active peers.

This research isn’t surprising to those of us who work with people day in, day out. When stress accumulates, the body stays in a heightened state of alertness — a survival mode that was useful thousands of years ago but is unhelpful in modern life. High stress hormones like cortisol don’t just make it harder to fall asleep; they make it more likely that you’ll wake in the middle of the night with a mind stuck on loop. Building a routine that helps your nervous system downregulate during the day — particularly through movement and structured training — changes how your body responds at night.

Sphere Wellness Studio Helping Melbourne Locals Reduce Stress

This is where semi-private training at Sphere Wellness Studio adds real value. Rather than leaving your body and mind to fend for themselves at the end of a long day, coming into a structured environment with a coach and a small group helps regulate both body and mind. Exercise — particularly strength and resistance training — has been shown in multiple studies to improve sleep quality and decrease insomnia symptoms. One meta-analysis of exercise interventions found that physical activity can improve subjective sleep quality in people with insomnia, acting similarly to behavioural sleep interventions. Strength training in particular appears powerful in promoting deeper, more restorative sleep, even compared to aerobic exercise alone.

Beyond these physiological effects, training in a semi-private setting addresses some of the underlying contributors to a racing mind. Structured sessions prevent decision fatigue — the mental load of having to plan and push yourself alone — because you’re booked in, supported, and guided. Being part of a small group reduces stress through social connection and shared effort. Movement releases endorphins and serotonin, chemicals that improve mood and help the brain transition out of stress mode. That same Australian Government health messaging emphasises that physical activity not only benefits our physical health but also helps reduce stress, manage anxiety, and improve mental well-being — all of which are directly linked to better sleep.

So what does this look like in practice?

It starts with acknowledging that a racing mind isn’t a failure or something you have to “just deal with.” It’s a sign that your nervous system hasn’t been given enough opportunity to downshift and recover during the day. The first step is to give yourself space to process thoughts before bed — writing them down earlier in the evening can help offload mental noise so your brain doesn’t try to do it for you when you’re lying still.

Sphere Wellness Members Rest During Semi-Private Persona Training Session

Then, building a consistent routine of activity that includes both strength and structured movement — in a supportive setting where effort is guided, not left to chance — trains your body to reduce stress hormones and promote the restorative deep sleep we all need. Australian research underscores this: higher daily activity correlates with better sleep quality, meaning fewer night-time awakenings and less tossing and turning.

Finally, experiment with your evening — avoid intense, high-heart-rate training too close to bedtime, and use calming habits like slow breathing or mindfulness to help your nervous system shift out of stress mode. Over time, these combined approaches — active days, structured support, and intentional wind-down routines — give your brain and body the signals they need to sleep deeply and consistently, rather than getting stuck replaying worries at 3 am.

References:

Beyond Blue 2023, Sleep and mental wellbeing, Beyond Blue, Australia, viewed 27 January 2026, https://www.beyondblue.org.au/mental-health/wellbeing/sleep.

Department of Health and Aged Care 2021, The relationship between physical activity, sleep and mental health, Australian Government, Canberra, viewed 27 January 2026, https://www.health.gov.au/news/the-domino-effect-of-being-physically-active-eating-and-sleeping-well.

Kredlow, MA, Capozzoli, MC, Hearon, BA, Calkins, AW & Otto, MW 2015, ‘The effects of physical activity on sleep: a meta-analytic review’, Journal of Behavioral Medicine, vol. 38, no. 3, pp. 427–449, https://doi.org/10.1007/s10865-015-9617-6.

RACGP 2019, Insomnia management, Australian Journal of General Practice, Royal Australian College of General Practitioners, Melbourne, viewed 27 January 2026, https://www1.racgp.org.au/ajgp/2019/april/insomnia-management.

Mr Lonnie Pitcher
Founder of Sphere Wellness Studio.

Mr Lonnie Pitcher

Mr Lonnie Pitcher Founder of Sphere Wellness Studio.

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