Me, too. My neurosurgeon from Hopkins told me decades ago (after doing a CT brain scan) is that it probably is due to my neck issues...my diagnosis is "chronic intractable failed neck pain syndrome (status post cervical fusion c5-c6) with chronic daily headaches complicated by a migraine disorder 3-5x wk". I also have numerous cervical pillows I rotate. I now have to sleep with a soft cervical collar to help with the cervical radiculopathy I now have down into my left hand which otherwise wakes me up and keeps me up sometimes for hours. I sleep with a gallon size storage baggie half full with large ice cubes balanced on the side of my head (I'm a side sleeper thus every time I turn over to the other side I wake up and have to readjust the ice pack!!!! Grrrrr!). I usually require two of these baggies in any one night. The only way I can get over a migraine is to lay still in a totally dark, quiet room with the ice baggie after taking my opioids and fall asleep (rarely do I get over a migraine without sleep). My problem now is trying to get my doctor to prescribe the Midrin I used to take that helped with my daily headaches and the onset of migraines and helped me fall asleep. Sometimes it can take 1, 2, 3, 4 hours to fall asleep without the Midrin (my health drug plan covers it). I take Melatonin and GABA and other supplements to help me sleep as well as Benadryl but that just helps keep my standard day/night sleep schedule halfway decent (one of my migraine triggers is insufficient/irregular sleep as well as environmental sensory overload triggers ie light, noise, odor and weather/barometric changes, crying/stress, no alcohol and eat very bland food!!!). I need a doctor in the MD/DC/VA area who accepts Federal BC/BS insurance and would continue my opioids for my failed neck pain as well as my opioids for migraines and also would prescribe Midrin (and in my dream world would also prescribe muscle relaxants for my joint-hypermobility Ehlers Danlos episodes of subluxation/dislocation of shoulder/ribs and for my periods of limited/almost immobile neck). Good luck to one and all! We are just too darn complicated for the average doctor!