Catch early light
Step outside for ten minutes in the first hour after waking. Cloudy daylight still counts and helps anchor your internal clock.
These are the simple ideas we share most often in studio. They are not rules — just small invitations you can try one at a time, in whatever order suits your week.
Step outside for ten minutes in the first hour after waking. Cloudy daylight still counts and helps anchor your internal clock.
Keep coffee, strong tea and energy drinks before mid-afternoon. Late cups can quietly stretch the time it takes you to wind down.
A short walk, stretching or a cycle home are enough. Steady, modest movement supports calmer evenings without overheating you.
Try to eat your last larger meal at least two hours before bed. Heavy late dinners can make falling asleep feel like work.
Switch overhead lamps for warm, low side lights about an hour before bed. Your body reads this as a quiet evening signal.
Choose a small spot — a basket, a shelf — where the phone lives after a chosen hour. Out of sight makes the wind-down easier.
Note one thing that went well and one small worry. Putting them on paper helps the mind stop turning the same loop.
A warm shower or footbath about 90 minutes before bed gently lowers core temperature afterwards, which feels naturally sleepy.
Aim for a slightly cool, well-aired room. Crack a window for ten minutes before bed even in winter — fresh air helps.
Heavy curtains or a simple eye mask block streetlights and bright nordic summer mornings without expensive renovations.
Earplugs, soft rugs or a steady fan can mask unpredictable sounds from neighbours, the street or the radiator.
Keep the bed mostly for rest and intimacy. The brain learns this association quickly and starts to relax faster on contact.