Are morning people born or made? In my case it was definitely made. I rarely went to bed before midnight, and Iâd almost always sleep in late. I usually didnât start hitting my stride each day until late afternoon.
But after a while I couldnât ignore the high correlation between success and rising early, even in my own life. On those rare occasions where I did get up early, I noticed that my productivity was almost always higher, not just in the morning but all throughout the day. And I also noticed a significant feeling of well-being. So being the proactive goal-achiever I was, I set out to become a habitual early riser. I promptly set my alarm clock for 5AMâ¦
⦠and the next morning, I got up just before noon.
Hmmmâ¦
I tried again many more times, each time not getting very far with it. I figured I must have been born without the early riser gene. Whenever my alarm went off, my first thought was always to stop that blasted noise and go back to sleep. I tabled this habit for a number of years, but eventually I came across some sleep research that showed me that I was going about this problem the wrong way. Once I applied those ideas, I was able to become an early riser consistently.
Itâs hard to become an early riser using the wrong strategy. But with the right strategy, itâs relatively easy.
The most common wrong strategy is this: You assume that if youâre going to get up earlier, youâd better go to bed earlier. So you figure out how much sleep youâre getting now, and then just shift everything back a few hours. If you now sleep from midnight to 8am, you figure youâll go to bed at 10pm and get up at 6am instead. Sounds very reasonable, but it will usually fail.
It seems there are two main schools of thought about sleep patterns. One is that you should go to bed and get up at the same times every day. Itâs like having an alarm clock on both ends â" you try to sleep the same hours each night. This seems practical for living in modern society. We need predictability in our schedules. And we need to ensure adequate rest.
The second school says you should listen to your bodyâs needs and go to bed when youâre tired and get up when you naturally wake up. This approach is rooted in biology. Our bodies should know how much rest we need, so we should listen to them.
Through trial and error, I found out for myself that both of these schools are suboptimal sleep patterns. Both of them are wrong if you care about productivity. Hereâs why:
If you sleep set hours, youâll sometimes go to bed when you arenât sleepy enough. If itâs taking you more than five minutes to fall asleep each night, you arenât sleepy enough. Youâre wasting time lying in bed awake and not being asleep. Another problem is that youâre assuming you need the same number of hours of sleep every night, which is a false assumption. Your sleep needs vary from day to day.
If you sleep based on what your body tells you, youâll probably be sleeping more than you need â" in many cases a lot more, like 10-15 hours more per week (the equivalent of a full waking day). A lot of people who sleep this way get 8+ hours of sleep per night, which is usually too much. Also, your mornings may be less predictable if youâre getting up at different times. And because our natural rhythms are sometimes out of tune with the 24-hour clock, you may find that your sleep times begin to drift.
The optimal solution for me has been to combine both approaches. Itâs very simple, and many early risers do this without even thinking about it, but it was a mental breakthrough for me nonetheless. The solution was to go to bed when Iâm sleepy (and only when Iâm sleepy) and get up with an alarm clock at a fixed time (7 days per week). So I always get up at the same time (in my case 5am), but I go to bed at different times every night.
I go to bed when Iâm too sleepy to stay up. My sleepiness test is that if I couldnât read a book for more than a page or two without drifting off, Iâm ready for bed. Most of the time when I go to bed, Iâm asleep within three minutes. I lie down, get comfortable, and immediately Iâm drifting off. Sometimes I go to bed at 9:30pm; other times I stay up until midnight. Most of the time I go to bed between 10-11pm. If Iâm not sleepy, I stay up until I canât keep my eyes open any longer. Reading is an excellent activity to do during this time, since it becomes obvious when Iâm too sleepy to read.
When my alarm goes off every morning, I turn it off, stretch for a couple seconds, and sit up. I donât think about it. Iâve learned that the longer it takes me to get up, the more likely I am to try to sleep in. So I donât allow myself to have conversations in my head about the benefits of sleeping in once the alarm goes off. Even if I want to sleep in, I always get up right away.
After a few days of using this approach, I found that my sleep patterns settled into a natural rhythm. If I got too little sleep one night, Iâd automatically be sleepier earlier and get more sleep the next night. And if I had lots of energy and wasnât tired, Iâd sleep less. My body learned when to knock me out because it knew I would always get up at the same time and that my wake-up time wasnât negotiable.
A side effect was that on average, I slept about 90 minutes less per night, but I actually felt more well-rested. I was sleeping almost the entire time I was in bed.
I read that most insomniacs are people who go to bed when they arenât sleepy. If you arenât sleepy and find yourself unable to fall asleep quickly, get up and stay awake for a while. Resist sleep until your body begins to release the hormones that rob you of consciousness. If you simply go to bed when youâre sleepy and then get up at a fixed time, youâll cure your insomnia. The first night youâll stay up late, but youâll fall asleep right away. You may be tired that first day from getting up too early and getting only a few hours of sleep the whole night, but youâll slog through the day and will want to go to bed earlier that second night. After a few days, youâll settle into a pattern of going to bed at roughly the same time and falling asleep right away.
So if you want to become an early riser (or just exert more control over your sleep patterns), then try this: Go to bed only when youâre too sleepy to stay up, and get up at a fixed time every morning.
I know my body needs about 7-8 hours of sleep. So, when I have to get up early, I usually get to sleep according to my needs. 4 AM if I have to be up at midday; midnight if I have to wake up at 8 AM. And so on. It becomes an habit.
This can only really work if your phone has a loud vibrator.
But you can ask a friend to text spam you (meaning multiple texts at the same time, so your phone will go off like crazy) when you want to wake up. Because setting alarm clocks is just too bland/mainstream. But this also will only work if your friend remembers or even wakes up before you do.
My phone wakes me up, the ringtone is a US army reveille. But wierd thing is i wake up always 3 - 10 minutes before it rings.. Human brain is amazing..
I can tell myself when to wake up before I go to bed, and the next morning, I'll wake up usually within half an hour of the time without an alarm. It's pretty cool, but I wonder what they call it...
Usually my alarm is sufficient; I typically lay in bed for a while not wanting to get up, then realize I have to get up, and get up. :P
Anyways, I'm much better than my siblings. My sister gets grumpy and ruins fun stuff for people, my younger brother whines a ton, and my youngest brother -- well, he's a baby. Enough said. :P