A "regret pill" for insomniacs: Can taking Leboresen help me sleep like a normal person?
Share
Introduction: You woke up again at three in the morning.
Staring at the ceiling, your mind races with thoughts of tomorrow's meeting, last month's unpaid Alipay bill, and the foolish things you said ten years ago. You roll over, pick up your phone, and search: "Is there a drug that can make me sleep like a normal person?"
You are not alone. Statistics show that over 300 million people in my country suffer from sleep disorders. In countless search results, one name repeatedly appears—Leborrheic.
Today, let's answer that soul-searching question: If you eat it, can you really sleep like a normal person?
---
Part 1: What constitutes "normal sleep"? 🌙
Before answering this question, we need to define: How do normal people sleep?
Close your eyes, but don't immediately "black out" of your memories. Instead, slowly drift into sleep—first light sleep, then deep sleep, and finally dream (REM sleep). This cycle repeats 4-5 times throughout the night. When you wake up in the morning, you'll remember your dreams, but you won't remember how many times you woke up (a normal person wakes up slightly 10-15 times a night, but the brain chooses not to record them).
This is "physiological sleep"—a natural process precisely regulated by the brain.
So here's the question: Can sleeping pills do that?
---
Part 2: The "illusion" created by traditional sleeping pills 😴
The working principle of benzodiazepines is to cover the brain with a thick blanket and let it "suffocate".
What was the result?
• You're asleep, but your EEG shows that your deep sleep is compressed and your dreams are suppressed. • You wake up in the morning with the blankets still on—feeling dizzy and like you're having a hangover. • Long-term use of blankets has conditioned the brain to feel suffocated, making it unable to fall back asleep on its own.
This type of sleep is called "drug-induced coma," not normal sleep.
---
Part 3: Lebere's fabricated "true perception" ✨
Now let's go back to Leberresen.
Remember the "orexin" we talked about in the last article? It's like a little alarm clock in your brain that wakes you up. People with insomnia often can't turn off this alarm clock when they should—it rings at 3 a.m., and you wake up.
What Leiboresen did was simple: he removed the battery from the alarm clock.
It won't make you dizzy or change your sleep structure; it simply turns off the "stay awake" signal. Then, your brain will naturally slip into sleep—light sleep, deep sleep, and dreaming—all of it.
The data from the clinical study are as follows:
• Shorter time to fall asleep: from an average of 60-70 minutes to 20-30 minutes. • Increased total sleep time: an average of 1-1.5 hours more sleep. • Fewer awakenings in the second half of the night: a significant decrease in the number of times waking up in the early morning.
More importantly, EEG data showed that the sleep patterns after taking Leborexen were highly similar to the EEG patterns of normal people during natural sleep.
In other words, it can indeed allow you to sleep like a normal person.
---
Part 4: "Normal person" is not the same as "perfect person" ⚠️
But don't rush to cheer.
"Sleep like a normal person" does not mean "you will become a sleep superman after eating it".
First, it is not a "sleep switch".
Even after taking your medication, you still need to turn off the lights, lie down, and close your eyes. If you continue scrolling through your phone after taking the medication, the brain's excitatory signals will still be present, and they may not be able to compete with your short videos.
Second, it has a "window of opportunity".
Leboresen needs to be taken half an hour before bedtime. Taking it too early means the medication will wear off before you're asleep; taking it too late may make you feel sleepy the next day. You have to follow its instructions; you can't rely on it alone.
Third, while the side effects are few, they are not zero.
Most noteworthy is the "complex sleep behavior"—some people sleepwalk, eat, or even drive while in a semi-conscious state. Although the probability is low (about 1%-5%), if it occurs, medication must be stopped immediately.
---
Part 5: A Soul-Searching Question: Can You Stop Taking the Medication? 🤔
Many insomniacs fear most: they can only sleep if they eat, and they will die if they don't eat.
This is what is known as "dependency." In this respect, Leiblersen has performed exceptionally well.
Because it does not act directly on GABA receptors (the main source of addiction), it does not produce the strong physiological dependence seen in tranquilizers. Clinical studies show that even with sudden discontinuation, the incidence of rebound insomnia is far lower than with traditional sleeping pills.
However—and here's an important "however"—psychological dependence may still exist.
If you constantly tell yourself, "I definitely can't sleep without medication," then even the safest medication will become a "crutch" in your mind. True, normal sleep comes after medication helps you rebuild your sleep ability, and you gradually learn to trust yourself.
---
Epilogue: Three pieces of advice for insomniacs 🎁
Returning to the initial question: After taking Leboresen, can I sleep like a normal person?
The answer is: Yes, but there are conditions.
1. You need a doctor's guidance. This is not a health supplement you can buy on your own after reading an article online. There are many types of sleep disorders (difficulty falling asleep, early awakening, sleep apnea), and Leboresen primarily targets "difficulty falling asleep" and "sleep maintenance disorders," it is not a panacea.
2. You need to give it time. It's not a quick fix; it usually takes 1-2 weeks of continuous use to achieve a stable effect. Some people don't feel much on the first night and give up, which is a major misconception.
3. You need to cooperate with "sleep hygiene". No matter how good the medicine is, it can't stop you from drinking coffee before bed, watching TV shows in bed, or turning your bedroom into a karaoke room. Medication is a "coach" to help you rebuild your sleep, not a "nanny" to help you sleep.
---
Finally, I want to say to everyone suffering from insomnia:
You are not fighting alone.
Being awake at 3 a.m. is not your fault—it might just be that your orexin system is working too hard.
New drugs like Leboresen offer us a possibility:
You can get a good night's sleep without having to numb your brain.
Tonight, may you turn off that annoying "wake-up alarm" and slip into a normal, gentle sleep that belongs to you.
Good night, sweet dreams 🌙💤
---
(Note: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute any medical advice. If you have sleep problems, please consult a professional doctor. The phrase "sleep like a normal person" mentioned in this article refers to a sleep structure that approximates physiological sleep patterns; individual results may vary.)