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5 tips to help you reset after the time change

To sleep better, exercise daily and limit caffeine and alcohol.
Olivia Sun/NPR
To sleep better, exercise daily and limit caffeine and alcohol.

From the moment you wake up, your body starts to prepare for sleep. We show you how to adjust your daytime habits to get the best possible night of rest.

Updated November 01, 2024 at 11:18 AM ET

This story was originally published on March 20, 2019 and has been updated.

Sign up for Life Kit's Guide to Better Sleep, a limited-run newsletter series. Over the course of a week, we'll send you science-backed strategies to help you sleep better, deeper and longer.

Daylight saving time officially ends at 2 a.m. local time on Sunday, Nov. 3. And while many rejoice over the extra hour of sleep that comes with "falling back," messing with our body clock takes a toll. In fact, the shift in your body's sleep-wake cycle can disrupt your sleep for several days.

Being underslept has a long list of downsides. The evidence has piled up. Without adequate sleep, we set ourselves up for increased risk of anxiety, depression, weight gain, even dementia.

So if you're trying to adjust to the time change or are just ready to change your sleeping habits overall, what can you do?

It turns out, nighttime rituals can take you only so far. Getting good sleep is very much dependent on your daytime routines, beginning the moment you wake up.

So in addition to committing eight hours to your bed each night, here are five things you can do during the day to sleep better tonight.

/ Olivia Sun/NPR
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Olivia Sun/NPR

1. Open the blinds, or better yet, go outside!

Try to start your day with a bath of sunlight. Open the blinds. And if you can, go outside for at least 20 minutes in the early to mid-morning hours. Studies show that daylight exposure in the morning tends to lead to better sleep at night.

"Daylight is one of the most powerful resetters of our 24-hour clock," says Matthew Walker, a professor of neuroscience and psychology at the University of California, Berkeley and founder of the Center for Human Sleep Science.

"When daylight comes through the eyes, it actually turns the faucet off on melatonin," Walker explains. As melatonin diminishes, "your brain now realizes, 'Oh, it must be daytime,' " Walker says. It's your body's natural wake-up call.

One study, published in 2017 in the journal Sleep Health, found that office workers who were exposed to more light in the hours between 8 a.m. and noon were able to fall asleep more quickly and sleep more soundly compared with people who were exposed to less light.

/ Olivia Sun/NPR
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Olivia Sun/NPR

2. Give up the afternoon latte. (Yes, really!)

Even if you think you're one of those people who can drink coffee after dinner and sleep just fine, you're probably a little wrong.

"I think people misunderstand caffeine and how it works with sleep," Walker says.

There's a compound found in our bodies and brains called adenosine. Walker calls it "the sleepiness chemical." You want it to build up throughout the day so that you're ready to sleep when your head hits the pillow. But caffeine can latch onto the receptors for adenosine.

"Caffeine comes into your system, and it hits the mute button on the adenosine signal of sleepiness, so it wakes you up," Walker says.

The half-life of caffeine — meaning the time it takes for your body to eliminate half of the caffeine you consume — is about five to seven hours. Walker says that if you have a cup of coffee at 4 p.m., by the time you're ready to go to sleep, half the caffeine may still be circulating in your system.

A study published in the Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine found that when people consumed caffeine even six hours prior to bedtime, it significantly disturbed their sleep compared with those who consumed a placebo.

Some people fall asleep just fine after consuming caffeine, but Walker says there may be a downside. He says research has shown that when you give people a standard cup of coffee, even if they fall asleep, they get less deep sleep.

"I think people need to be quite mindful of the timing of their caffeine," Walker says — and think about putting the brakes on caffeinated drinks by late morning.

/ Olivia Sun/NPR
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Olivia Sun/NPR

3. Move your body and get tired.

As hard as it may be to fit a workout routine into your day, it's worth it.

Exercise may help promote good sleep in two ways. Physical activity is known to reduce anxiety, so this alone may contribute to good sleep. (If you want extra help to reduce the late-night ruminating, check out this Life Kit episode on CBT-I for sleep.)

In addition, exercise can physically tire you out. A lot of studies demonstrate the link between physical activity and improved sleep. A meta-analysis published in the Journal of Behavioral Medicine concluded that regular exercise improves the quality of sleep, helps people fall asleep faster and even helps people sleep a little longer.

Walker also points to evidence from a study of older adults who were not in the habit of exercising. Four months after starting a program to increase their physical activity, they tended to sleep more — up to about an hour more per night.

"If you add that one hour up week after week, month after month, decade after decade, it's like compounding interest on a loan — that it really starts to increase in terms of a long-term, escalating impact," Walker says.

Bonus: While we're on the topic of healthy habits, eating well can also help tamp down anxiety, and this in turn may help improve sleep. A recent study found that three weeks of adhering to a Mediterranean-style diet rich in fruits and vegetables and lower in processed foods and refined carbohydrates led to a reduction in depression and anxiety in a group of young adults.

/ Olivia Sun/NPR
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Olivia Sun/NPR

4. Limit your evening alcohol intake.

Have you ever crashed after a night of drinking, only to wake up suddenly in the middle of the night? Yep, alcohol has some counterintuitive influences on our sleep.

"Many people see alcohol as a sleep aid," Walker says. "Unfortunately, it's one of the greatest misunderstood substances when it comes to sleep. It is not a sleep aid at all."

For starters, Walker says alcohol can block or interfere with deep sleep, making our sleep more fragmented.

There's a lot of research showing alcohol's bad effects on sleep.

After a night of drinking, REM sleep — the stage of sleep in which you dream more — tends to be suppressed. This may be especially true during the first part of the night, when there's still alcohol in the bloodstream.

Walker says even one glass of wine at dinner can have an effect. That doesn't mean you should never indulge, but make an informed choice.

"I don't want to sound puritanical," Walker says. "You know life is to be lived to an extent. It's all about checks and balances."

And one more thing to keep in mind: Walker points to one study that shows alcohol can also dampen our ability to consolidate new memories.

"What they found is that alcohol, if you disrupted sleep the first night after learning, it washed away about 50% of the memory. So you were only able to save 50% of what you learned," he says.

5. Make your bedroom a screen-free, peaceful refuge.

Lots of us are tethered to our devices. But these electronics can expose us to a type of light known as blue light. And when we bring our devices into bed with us, it can interfere with sleep. How? The blue light can prevent or slow down the release of the sleep hormone melatonin — that's the hormone that signals to our brain that it's time to start dozing off.

So really try (and we mean this!) to read from an old-fashioned book or paper magazine at bedtime. Walker says that when researchers have compared "one hour of iPad reading versus one hour of just reading in dim light with just a paper book, the iPad actually [significantly] blocked the release of melatonin."

"Normally when the sun goes down and the lights turn off, our body releases melatonin, which helps us get a nice, restful sleep," Lisa Ostrin, an assistant professor at the University of Houston College of Optometry, told NPR's Jon Hamilton in 2017. "But when we have all this artificial light on, it's tricking those photoreceptors into thinking it's still daytime."

Ostrin and her collaborators have shown in a study that filtering out blue light can be helpful. Study participants wore special glasses to filter blue light — and after two weeks their melatonin levels had increased by 58% and they reported improved sleep. Ostrin told NPR that apps to filter blue light from screens are not as effective as blue-blocking glasses, but they may still be helpful.

Copyright 2019 NPR

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Allison Aubrey
Allison Aubrey is a Washington-based correspondent for NPR News, where her stories can be heard on Morning Edition and All Things Considered. She has reported extensively on the coronavirus pandemic since it began, providing near-daily coverage of new developments and effects. She's also a contributor to the PBS NewsHour and is one of the hosts of NPR's Life Kit.

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