Sleep

Sleep better, feel better

Sleep is a daily recovery tool that supports energy, appetite regulation, mood, and training results. Use this guide to build a simple routine you can actually keep.

Modern bedroom with morning light for a calm sleep routine
Why it matters

What good sleep supports

You donโ€™t need perfectionโ€”just consistent basics that improve recovery and decision-making day to day.

Steadier energy

More stable daytime alertness and fewer cravings for quick-fix snacks.

Better training recovery

Muscle repair and nervous-system recovery work best when sleep is consistent.

Mood and focus

Sleep helps regulate stress response, patience, and attentionโ€”key for sticking to habits.

Build your plan

A simple sleep routine

Start with these four levers. Pick one change this week, then stack the next.

Set a consistent wake time

Anchor your day with a wake time you can keep most days. Bedtime will follow naturally as sleep pressure builds.


Light in the morning, dim at night

Get outdoor light within an hour of waking. In the evening, lower room lighting and reduce bright screens to help your body wind down.


Caffeine and alcohol timing

Keep caffeine earlier in the day (many people do best stopping 8+ hours before bed). Limit alcohol close to bedtimeโ€”it can fragment sleep.


Make the room sleep-friendly

Cool, dark, and quiet wins. Try blackout curtains, a fan/white noise, and keeping the bed for sleep (and intimacy) only.

Sleep + budget: make it realistic

Better sleep doesnโ€™t have to be expensive. A few low-cost choices can improve consistency and reduce โ€œwillpower spendingโ€ on energy drinks, snacks, and last-minute convenience meals.

In the Budget Planner, youโ€™ll build a monthly target that includes groceries and healthy habitsโ€”so your routine is sustainable, not stressful.

See the Budget Planner

Sleep FAQs

General education onlyโ€”not medical advice. If you have persistent insomnia, loud snoring, or daytime sleepiness, consider talking with a qualified clinician.

How many hours of sleep do I need?

Most adults do best with 7โ€“9 hours. Your ideal amount shows up as stable energy, mood, and performance across the week.

What if I canโ€™t fall asleep quickly?

Try a consistent wind-down routine (10โ€“30 minutes), keep the room cool and dark, and avoid clock-watching. If youโ€™re wide awake, get up briefly and do something calm in dim light, then return to bed when sleepy.

Does napping ruin nighttime sleep?

Short naps can help, but long or late naps can reduce sleep pressure. If you nap, aim for 10โ€“30 minutes and keep it earlier in the day.

Is melatonin a good idea?

Melatonin can help shift timing for some people, but itโ€™s not a knockout pill. If you use it, consider a low dose and focus first on light exposure, schedule consistency, and caffeine timing.

How do I stop waking up at night?

Night waking is common. Focus on overall consistency, limit alcohol close to bed, and keep the room quiet and dark. If waking is frequent with gasping/snoring, get evaluated for sleep-disordered breathing.

Whatโ€™s the fastest win I can try tonight?

Pick one: dim lights 60 minutes before bed, stop caffeine earlier, or set a fixed wake time tomorrow. Small changes done consistently beat big changes done once.