Originally published & medically reviewed on BezzyMS (Healthline Media) on February 21, 2025
If you live with MS, you probably know that very specific kind of tired that does not fix itself with one good night of sleep. Sometimes you are physically exhausted, but your mind still feels awake and wired. Sometimes you lie down to rest and your brain stays in planning mode anyway, thoughts circling each other and the chorus of that song like na-na nana-nana on repeat. That’s where NSDR can be a genuinely useful tool to have in your back pocket.
NSDR stands for Non-Sleep Deep Rest. Neuroscientist Dr. Andrew Huberman coined the term as an umbrella label for guided practices that bring the brain and body into a deeply relaxed state without fully falling asleep. It can include practices like yoga nidra and certain types of guided meditation and hypnosis-style relaxation. Dr. Andrew Huberman’s NSDR overview.
Why NSDR is worth knowing about when you have MS
MS bodies are personal and unpredictable. Let’s be clear: NSDR is not a treatment for MS though. What it can be is a repeatable rest strategy that helps you step out of stress mode when your system feels overloaded.
For many people, NSDR is appealing because it is:
- Low effort. You lie down or recline and follow the audio.
- Accessible on low-cognitive days. You do not have to focus perfectly for it to count.
- Flexible. Ten minutes helps. Twenty minutes helps. Even trying it once teaches you what your body does.
- Supportive for wired-tired days. When you cannot nap, it gives your nervous system a pause.
If fatigue is one of your big MS realities, NSDR fits nicely into a energy-management mindset because it gives you a way to rest that is not dependent on sleep showing up on command.
The simplest way to try NSDR (no perfection required)
If you want to experiment with NSDR, here is a simple setup that keeps it realistic:
- Pick a short session first (10–20 minutes).
- Get comfortable. Lie down, recline, or sit supported. If lying flat is uncomfortable, put a pillow under your knees or lie on your side.
- Use guided audio. That is the whole point. You are borrowing someone else’s structure so your brain can stop steering for a bit.
- Let your mind wander. If you notice you drifted, you just come back to the voice. That counts as doing it.
- Stop if anything feels off. If a practice increases anxiety, dizziness, or discomfort, adjust your position or choose a different track.
Some people use NSDR after a bad night of sleep, some use it mid-day to prevent a crash, and some use it as a gentle bridge into bedtime. Sleep Foundation also describes NSDR as a guided practice typically done lying down, often using narration and breathing or visualization cues. Sleep Foundation’s guide to NSDR.
When NSDR tends to fit best in real life with MS
Here are the moments I think NSDR earns its keep, especially with dynamic disability and unpredictable energy:
- After a sensory-heavy errand or appointment
- When brain fog makes everything feel louder
- When you are tired but cannot nap
- Before you hit the point of no return (the crash)
- As a reset between work blocks on a low-spoons day
Read my original article on BezzyMS
This post is a companion for my byline. The full article goes deeper into what NSDR is, how it compares to yoga nidra and meditation, and why it can be a practical rest option for people living with MS fatigue and stress.est that is not dependent on sleep showing up on command.
Some people use NSDR after a bad night of sleep, some use it mid-day to prevent a crash, and some use it as a gentle bridge into bedtime. Sleep Foundation also describes NSDR as a guided practice typically done lying down, often using narration and breathing or visualization cues.
Gentle disclaimer
This is educational and based on lived experience and reputable sources. It is not medical advice. If you have questions about fatigue management, sleep, or symptom changes, check in with your clinician.
Read the full article: https://www.bezzyms.com/discover/living-well-ms/health-how-non-sleep-deep-rest-can-benefit-people-with-ms/
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