
Follow your chronotype.
According to Breus, everyone falls into one of four sleep chronotypes. Your chronotype essentially dictates the time your body naturally wants to fall asleep at night and wake up in the morning. Think of it like the time zone for your personal circadian rhythm, or internal clock. In his book The Power of When, Breus describes the four chronotype as animals:
- The bear: The most common chronotype, bears naturally want to wake up close to sunrise (though they may reach for the snooze button a few times, too). They tend to have an energy dip in the late afternoon and are ready to hit the hay at the end of the day.
- The wolf: Wolves struggle to wake up early and naturally want to sleep in. They have a surge of energy later in the day and get their best thinking and working done at night.
- The lion: Lions are the early birds of the chronotype world. They wake up naturally and lose steam as the day goes on, preferring earlier bedtimes.
- The dolphin: Dolphins struggle to wake up in the morning and fall asleep at night. They tend to feel tired throughout the day and wired during the evening.
Breus says that setting your sleep schedule according to your chronotype (take this quiz if you’re unsure which animal you are) can help make mornings easier. If you’re a wolf, for example, stop setting an early alarm like a lion. Instead, try to rearrange your day to free up some more time for sleep in the mornings and slot important tasks for later in the afternoon.
Once you set realistic parameters about the time you’ll get into and out of bed every day, you can clean up your nightly habits: Try not to drink alcohol or eat heavy food too close to your new bedtime, turn off electronics and start your wind-down ritual about an hour before bed, and consider introducing a sleep-promoting supplement, like magnesium, to your routine.* Once you prioritize deeper, longer sleep, more energized mornings will naturally follow.ADVERTISEMENT
2. Drink 16 to 18 fluid ounces of water first thing in the morning.
Our bodies lose a lot of water through our exhales while we sleep (up to a liter’s worth, according to Breus), so we naturally wake up craving H2O. “Picture this,” Breus tells mbg, “you’ve been drinking coffee all day, which is a diuretic. Then you have a couple of glasses of wine with dinner, which is also a diuretic. You go to sleep, and sleep in itself is a diuretic. You’re going to wake up dehydrated.”
Dehydration can cause us to feel less alert and lead to the morning blahs, but getting into the habit of drinking 16 to 18 fluid ounces of water right when you wake up can help. Get those two glasses in before you start eating breakfast and drinking your morning coffee.
3. Get some sunlight (either outside or in front of a window).
Too much melatonin—a hormone secreted during the sleep-wake cycle—in the morning can confuse your body into thinking that it’s still time to sleep, so you’ll want to reduce levels of it right when you wake up. “Direct sunlight turns off the melanopsin cells in your brain that give the signal to turn on melatonin,” Breus explains. “Grab a bottle of water, walk over to the window, and get some sunlight while you’re drinking the water. You’ll be surprised at how much better you feel.”
Your anti-groggy morning routine, summarized:
A solid sleep schedule sets the tone for energized mornings. Consider when your body naturally feels awake and tired based on your sleep chronotype, and try to follow that rhythm. Then, get into the habit of drinking water in the sunshine first thing in the morning for a quick wake-up call.
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