He is twenty-six. He has not had a full night's sleep in three years. He wakes up tired. He drinks coffee until lunch and energy drinks until evening. By night, his mind is too wired to switch off. He scrolls until 2 AM. He sleeps for four broken hours. He wakes up tired again. His mother thinks he is being lazy. His father thinks he just needs to discipline himself. His grandfather, who farmed a field in the heat at sixty-five, simply cannot understand how a young man can be this exhausted doing a desk job.
Here is what they do not know. He is not lazy. He is suffering from one of the most under-recognised mental health crises of our generation — chronic sleep deprivation combined with constant overstimulation in a permanently online life. None of these were possible in his grandfather's world. All three are now standard. At Bharosa Neuro Psychiatry Hospitals Hyderabad, we treat young patients almost every week whose entire mental health is collapsing under this triple weight, and whose families have no framework to understand it.
Sleep is not rest. It is the time when the brain physically cleans itself, consolidates memories, and rebuilds the neural circuits that handle emotion, learning, and decision-making. The American Academy of Sleep Medicine, the leading professional body of sleep specialists in the United States, recommends that adults get seven to nine hours of sleep per night for adequate physical and mental health. Anything less, sustained over weeks and months, has measurable consequences for mood, cognition, immunity, cardiovascular health, and risk of psychiatric illness.
Chronic sleep deprivation is not a personal habit. It is a clinical risk factor. The U.S. National Institute of Mental Health, the world's largest funder of mental health research, identifies sleep disturbance as both a symptom and a driver of nearly every major mental illness — depression, anxiety, bipolar disorder, psychosis, and substance use disorder. When the older generation says you just need to sleep more, they are right about the diagnosis and naive about how hard that is to do in a world designed to keep you awake.
Blue light from screens suppresses melatonin, the hormone responsible for sleep onset. Notification sounds and vibrations keep the brain in a state of mild vigilance. Engaging content trains the brain to expect rapid stimulation, making the slower wind-down of sleep feel boring and unwelcome. The line between work and rest has been erased, so the brain never gets the signal that the day is over. Coffee, energy drinks, and stress hormones keep the body chemically alert long past the time it should be settling. The cumulative result is a generation that has not had real sleep in years and does not even remember what it feels like.
Layer on overstimulation. The human nervous system was designed for the visual and auditory environment of a small village. It now processes thousands of high-intensity inputs every day — alerts, headlines, videos, images, demands, decisions. The World Health Organization has recognised excessive screen exposure as a global mental health concern, particularly for young people whose brains are still developing the executive function needed to regulate attention and emotion.
Anxiety baseline rises, because the threat circuits never get the signal to switch off. Mood collapses, because the brain has not had the recovery sleep it needs to regulate emotion. Concentration evaporates, because the prefrontal cortex is exhausted. Memory weakens, because the consolidation that happens in deep sleep is being skipped. Immunity drops, because cortisol stays elevated. Many young patients arrive at Bharosa Neuro Psychiatry Hospitals Hyderabad presenting with what looks like depression, anxiety, or attention disorder, when the underlying engine is years of accumulated sleep debt and chronic overstimulation.
The older generation does not recognise this picture because they did not live in the conditions that produced it. They worked hard, they were tired, and then they slept. Their world did not interrupt their nights. Their phones did not buzz at midnight. Their entertainment did not chase them into the bedroom. When they say things were harder in their day, they are right about the work and wrong about the rest.
At Bharosa Neuro Psychiatry Hospitals Hyderabad, our consultant MD Psychiatrists and clinical psychologists treat sleep, overstimulation, and mood as parts of a single picture rather than separate problems. We assess sleep architecture, screen patterns, caffeine intake, work and study load, and any underlying anxiety, depression, or attention disorder. We use evidence-based Cognitive Behavioural Therapy for Insomnia (CBT-I), one of the most rigorously studied non-pharmacological treatments in modern psychiatry, and where appropriate, medication for the most disabling symptoms. We work with patients on realistic, sustainable changes — not perfectionist ideals that fail in week two.
Most patients are surprised by how dramatically things improve once sleep is restored. The depression they thought was permanent lifts. The anxiety they thought was their personality fades. The concentration they thought they had lost forever returns. None of this is magic. It is what happens when the brain is finally allowed to do what it has been begging to do for years.
Q: How much sleep do I really need?
A: Seven to nine hours for adults. Less than six is medically risky if sustained.
Q: Will sleeping pills fix it?
A: Sleeping pills mask the problem and can become addictive. Cognitive Behavioural Therapy for Insomnia (CBT-I) is the first-line treatment.
Q: Can chronic sleep loss cause permanent brain damage?
A: It is associated with increased risk of cognitive decline. Most damage is reversible with treatment.
Q: Is overstimulation a real diagnosis?
A: Not standalone, but it is a recognised contributor to anxiety, depression, and attention disorders.
Q: When should I see a psychiatrist?
A: When sleep, mood, or focus have been affected for more than two weeks.
Sleep and overstimulation are real, treatable medical issues. Speak to Bharosa Neuro Psychiatry Hospitals - Hyderabad for a confidential assessment. Call +91 95050 58886.

Mental health struggles do not define you, and you don’t have to face them alone. If you notice any early signs of mental health disorders in yourself or a family member, take the first step today.