Many people affected by trauma or moral injury don’t struggle to fall asleep, they struggle to stay asleep.
They fall asleep exhausted, only to wake in the early hours of the morning:
2am, 3am, 4am. The body feels heavy, but the nervous system is alert.
Thoughts start moving. Images surface. Sleep feels close, but unreachable.
This pattern is common in trauma-related insomnia and moral injury, and it is not a failure of willpower or sleep hygiene.
It is a nervous system still on watch.
Trauma, Moral Injury, and Early Morning Waking
Trauma alters how the brain and body regulate safety. During sleep, especially in the early morning hours, the brain naturally processes emotional memory. For people with trauma, this can activate unresolved
threat responses.
Moral injury, experiences involving betrayal, violation of values, or exposure to human cruelty, can intensify this process. The nervous system may remain alert not because danger is present, but because
something deeply unresolved still feels morally or emotionally unsafe.
Common causes of trauma-related early waking include:
- PTSD and complex trauma
- Moral injury (first responders, survivors amongst victims, healthcare workers, veterans, humanitarian workers)
- Chronic hypervigilance
- Suppressed anger, guilt, grief, or shame
- Ongoing exposure to responsibility or ethical conflict
In these cases, waking is not random. It is the body continuing to do what it learned to do: stay alert.
Why Traditional Sleep Advice Often Fails
Standard insomnia advice focuses on cognition and behaviour, “don’t think,” “relax,” “breathe,” “sleep hygiene.” While useful for some, these strategies often fail for trauma-related sleep disturbance.
At 3am, the thinking brain is offline.
The nervous system does not respond to logic, it responds to felt safety. Trying to force sleep can increase arousal and reinforce the sense that something is wrong.
A Trauma-Informed Approach to Getting Back to Sleep
The goal is not to make sleep happen, but to help the nervous system stand down.
Helpful trauma-informed strategies include:
- Removing pressure: Let go of the task of sleeping. Rest is enough.
- Grounding in the body: Feel the bed supporting you. Notice weight, warmth, and contact.
- Soft focus: Allow thoughts to drift without following or stopping them.
- Low-arousal sound: Familiar, neutral audio that signals safety, not engagement.
Sleep often returns once the nervous system no longer feels monitored or pressured.
When Sleep Disruption Signals Moral Injury
In moral injury, early waking may be accompanied by:
- A sense of unease rather than fear
- Rumination about responsibility, fairness, or harm
- Quiet shame or anger
- A feeling of being “on duty” even at rest
These are not cognitive problems. They are relational and ethical wounds stored in the nervous system.
Healing moral injury often requires:
- Making meaning of what happened
- Allowing emotional truth without justification
- Restoring a sense of moral coherence
- Experiencing safety in relationship
As these processes unfold, sleep frequently improves, not because techniques are applied, but because vigilance is no longer required.
A Reframe for Trauma-Related Insomnia
Instead of asking:
“Why can’t I sleep?”
Try asking:
“What part of me is still protecting, watching, or holding something unfinished?”
This question shifts the experience from frustration to compassion, and that shift alone can soften the night.
When to Seek Support
If early morning waking persists, especially alongside trauma symptoms, moral distress, or emotional numbing, it may be a sign that your nervous system needs support, not more self-management.
Trauma-informed therapy can help the body relearn safety, process unresolved experience, and restore sleep as a natural consequence of healing.