One of the best bits of advice I had when I was struggling with chronic insomnia was to get up at the same time each day and head outside into the morning light. Researchers have found that the time you get up in the morning has a greater influence on our body clock than the time you go to bed. A big part of this is due to the effects of daylight.
Use the morning light to help you sleep at night
If sleep isn't coming, get up!
When light hits the eye, it excites receptors at the back of the eye that detect light and send signals to a region of the brain called the suprachiasmatic nucleus, your "master" body clock. A burst of morning light halts the production of the sleep hormone, melatonin, and signals to the body that the day has begun.
A morning signal will kick-start a cascade of events so that around twelve hours later, melatonin starts to rise, preparing your body for a deep rest.
3. Enjoy your bed
It may sound counter-intuitive, but the best thing you can do if sleep isn't coming, is to get up! It's part of something called stimulus control, and studies have consistently shown that doing this can reduce insomnia and that the effects are long-lasting.
The goal is to avoid time spent lying there awake and "not-sleeping" – so your brain reassociates the bed as a place of sleep. By getting up when you're not drifting off, and going to bed only when you are feeling truly sleepy, the negative association can be broken.
Dr Colleen Carney, who I hear from in my Sleep Well podcast, is one of the leading voices on something called stimulus control therapy. This technique has five main steps, which I explore in more detail in my Enjoy Your Bed episode. And if you follow these properly – and I have found this for myself – you can get powerful results.