Hi Amca,
No, not really. Sleep restriction very much is in line with having a controlling personality I think.
SRT really just helps to make you tired the following nights, not necessarily the night to come.
The thing is to look at it as TIME IN BED not TIME YOU MUST BE ASLEEP.
I think if you adopt the attitude of I MUST SLEEP DURING THESE TIMES, then that is the wrong attitude and will make you anxious.
The better idea I think is to adopt is this: If you sleep fine, and if you don’t that’s fine too, just try to be as restful as possible instead, keeping in mind that rest is almost as good as sleep anyway and if you don’t sleep much or at all tonight, then you will really raise the chances of sleeping the following night.
My view of SRT is not let it interfere too much with your daily life because folks may want to go out for a late evening with pals and /or get up late or early for work/other reasons.
So, the way I did it was to just try to restrict it to about 5 hours time in bed and build from that – so allowing myself lots of leeway on actual get up times, so I could still have a normal life.
These days, after 5 months of being OK, I tend to pay less attention to time in bed. Last night, for example, I got about 7 and a quarter hours sleep – about an hour and half over my average.
So I fully expect to not be too tired tonight, so will probably stay up till about 2am I guess and still get up about 630am . But if I feel tired before then, I will recognise it and go for sleep earlier. (As you get better and use SRT more, you learn to recognise when you are sleepy. As you use ACT more, you learn to let go of the worry and be more accepting. Both are complimentary in my view).
Hope this helps.