Shift your last coffee earlier by sixty, then ninety, then one hundred twenty minutes across three weeks, watching for changes in sleep latency and continuity. Reader Maya discovered her sweet spot at 11 a.m., gaining faster sleep and calmer, steadier afternoons.
Shift your last coffee earlier by sixty, then ninety, then one hundred twenty minutes across three weeks, watching for changes in sleep latency and continuity. Reader Maya discovered her sweet spot at 11 a.m., gaining faster sleep and calmer, steadier afternoons.
Shift your last coffee earlier by sixty, then ninety, then one hundred twenty minutes across three weeks, watching for changes in sleep latency and continuity. Reader Maya discovered her sweet spot at 11 a.m., gaining faster sleep and calmer, steadier afternoons.
Use a single sheet or notes app with consistent fields: bedtime, latency, wakeups, morning feel, and one free-text observation. Keep it under two minutes nightly. Consistency beats detail, and honest notes today become tomorrow’s surprisingly clear direction.
Wearables can help, but treat them as guides, not judges. Track trends across weeks, not nights. Note artifacts from late movement or illness. Prioritize how you feel, and let devices corroborate rather than dictate, especially when experimenting with subtle routine changes.
After seven to fourteen nights, review your log with curiosity. Keep what worked, revert what didn’t, and select the next single lever to test. Post your results and questions, invite friends to join, and build momentum through supportive accountability.