Circadian Health
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How to Achieve Optimal Circadian Health (23+ Practical Tips)

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How to Achieve Optimal Circadian Health (23+ Practical Tips)
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Key Takeaways

  • Consistent routines and exposure to natural light are crucial for optimizing circadian health.
  • Practical lifestyle changes, such as regular exercise, a balanced – timely diet, and a proper sleep environment, can significantly enhance sleep quality and overall well-being.
  • Personalized assessments help identify and implement effective strategies to align your lifestyle with your natural circadian rhythms.
Have you ever wished you could press a button and get rid of your bad sleep, poor energy, and mood swings?
While a literal physical button like that doesn’t quite exist, these symptoms are very common in people with poor circadian health, affecting millions worldwide.
Our modern lifestyles, with their irregular schedules and constant exposure to artificial light day and night, often disrupt our natural sleep-wake cycles, leading to many health problems.
But what if you could improve your sleep, boost your energy levels, and enhance your overall well-being by optimizing your circadian health?
In this article, we’ll explore that in detail. We will review practical steps, lifestyle changes, and product recommendations to help you achieve optimal circadian health.
So, without further ado, let’s dive right into it.

Understanding Circadian Health

Did you know that nearly 70 million people suffer from sleep disorders in the United States alone?

Many of those people experience disrupted circadian health without even knowing it.
What is circadian health?
Circadian health (or circadian rhythms) refers to keeping your body’s internal body clock in sync with natural day and night cycles.
Your sleep, mood, and overall well-being will be optimal as long as your internal clock functions properly and is in sync.
Did you know?
The term "circadian" comes from the Latin words "circa" (around) and "diem" (day), meaning "around a day."

Practical Tips for Optimal Circadian Health

Achieving proper circadian health is a top priority if you want to improve your overall well-being.
However, reliable information on how to improve circadian health is not always easy to find.

Here are some of the best practical tips you can include in your daily routine and see tangible results in the first few weeks (as long as you’re consistent with it):

  • Daily sunlight exposure: Spend at least 30 minutes outside in natural sunlight soon after waking up (ideally before noon). If your daily activities allow it, spend as much time outside as possible with sunlight exposure. Morning light exposure helps suppress melatonin production and reset your circadian rhythm for the day, keeping you awake and full of energy.

  • Light therapy glasses: In some places or with a busy lifestyle, getting natural sunlight consistently is a luxury. In those cases, your next best option is blue light therapy glasses. If natural sunlight isn’t readily available where you live, wear light therapy glasses for 20-30 minutes in the morning (before or during work.)

  • Consistent wake-up time: Your internal clock is extremely precise, and even minor changes in your habits can affect your sleep. Therefore, you should go to bed and wake up at approximately the same time every day. When just starting out, try to keep the timing difference within half an hour and don’t forget to be consistent through the weekends as well!

  • Regular physical activity: Exercise helps improve sleep quality and synchronizes your circadian rhythms. Aim for at least 30 minutes of moderate exercise daily, preferably outdoors. This doesn’t need to be a Mister or Miss Olympia type of workout, even an outdoor walk will do the trick, provided you’re consistent.

  • Mind your diet: Eat regularly and avoid heavy meals close to bedtime. Specifically, try to avoid eating about three hours before going to bed.

  • Limit caffeine: Caffeine and other stimulants can interfere with your ability to fall asleep and – by leading to altered light exposure when awake – disrupt your circadian rhythms. Avoid any stimulants and caffeine at least 6 hours before sleep.

  • Hydration: You should drink sufficient water regardless of your circadian health, but proper hydration is also important to support healthy circadian rhythms.

  • Reduce screen time: Minimize screens (phones, tablets, computers) at least an hour before bed. Blue light from screens can suppress melatonin production and delay sleep onset.

  • Relaxing bedtime routine: Have you ever tried sleeping with lots of stress? It’s almost impossible. That’s why you should develop a calming pre-sleep routine, such as reading a book, taking a warm bath, or practising meditation. These activities help signal your body that it’s time to wind down and prepare for sleep.

  • Optimizing your sleep environment: Ensure your bedroom is dark, quiet, and cool (19°C or 66F). Use blackout curtains, earplugs, or eye masks if necessary. Some people can sleep soundly even with heavy light and noise, but for most people, optimizing their sleep environment is a great idea to improve circadian health and sleep.

  • Mindfulness and stress reduction: Mindfulness practices like yoga, deep breathing exercises, or progressive muscle relaxation before bed can improve your circadian health by helping you fall asleep faster and easier. Also, reducing stress and anxiety can significantly improve your ability to fall and stay asleep.

        
Did you know?
Studies show that people with consistent sleep schedules are less likely to suffer from heart disease.

   

  • Limit alcohol consumption: Alcohol is one of the most essential sleep disruptors in our society. While it’s true that alcohol can make you drowsy and seemingly improve your sleep, it can easily disrupt your sleep cycle later in the night by disrupting the body’s natural processes and also causing dehydration and night awakenings. Try to avoid alcohol, especially late in the evening (ideally all together).

  • Keep a sleep diary: Writing in a sleep diary every day can help identify patterns or habits that affect your sleep quality. Plus, it can make the whole circadian health optimization a fun game. Track your sleep patterns, bedtime routine, and how you feel daily.

  • Avoid long naps: Naps can be incredible when you feel groggy throughout the day and need to recharge. But be careful; if done wrong, they can also significantly disrupt your circadian health. If you need to nap, keep it short (15 minutes max.) and do it early in the afternoon.

  • Intermittent fasting: Fasting for more extended periods can help reset your circadian rhythms. Try intermittent fasting, such as eating all meals within a 12-hour window, but always consult your doctor first. You should only reduce the time you eat, but never the amount of calories.

  • Gradual light alarm clock: Waking up abruptly with your loud alarm clock and the intense sunlight coming through your windows can be a catastrophe for your circadian health. Try a wake-up light alarm that simulates a sunrise and gently wakes you with gradual light and sound exposure.

  • Limit nicotine: Just like with alcohol, you should limit nicotine to a minimum, especially before bed. Nicotine is a stimulant that can disrupt your sleep patterns.

  • Humidifiers: Add a humidifier to your bedroom to maintain optimal humidity levels if you are struggling with dry air (e.g. below 40% humidity). Proper humidity can prevent dry air from disrupting your sleep.

  • Reduce stress and mental stimulation: Avoid mentally stimulating activities before bed, like intense work or discussions.

  • Evening walks: Walks are one of the easiest and most effective forms of physical activity. Light physical activity, like short walks, can help signal your body that it’s time to start winding down and help relax you.

Personal Circadian Health Assessment Experiment

How well do you understand your current circadian health?
The answer is probably not very well, right?
Here’s a fun experiment you can do at home to assess and improve your circadian health.

Step 1: Track Your Sleep and Wake Times

Keep a sleep diary for at least one week, noting the time you go to bed and the time you wake up each day. This will help you identify your natural sleep-wake cycle and any inconsistencies.

Step 2: Monitor Energy Levels

Record your energy levels and mood at different times throughout the day. Use a 1-10 scale to rate your energy levels at different times of the day. Understanding your energy peaks and troughs can reveal patterns related to your circadian rhythms.

Step 3: Use a Sleep Tracking App

Many apps and wearable devices track sleep quality, duration, and patterns. Pick the one you like most, track the data from these apps and write it down.

Step 4: Identify Patterns

Try the steps above for at least one week. The more you stick to the tracking routine, the more accurate the results will be. After a week, review your sleep diary and tracking data to spot any patterns or irregularities.

Step 5: Adjust Your Routine

Once you identify your patterns, Make minor adjustments to your daily routine based on your findings, such as changing your bedtime, modifying light exposure, or altering meal times.

Step 6: Observe Changes

After making adjustments, continue tracking your sleep and energy levels for another week. Repeat the same process until you start seeing significant results in sleep, mood, and overall well-being.

If you’re unsure what to track in your sleep diary, here’s a quick list you can copy.

You can keep all the bullet points in this list, or you can add/remove whichever fit your sleep schedule better:

  • Bedtime/rise time: Record the time you plan to go to bed and what time you want to get up at.

  • What time did you try to go to sleep? Record when you began trying to fall asleep.

  • What time did you fall asleep? Estimate the time you actually fell asleep.

  • How many times did you wake up during the night? Record the number of awakenings, but do not switch on the light at night, do that in the morning when out of bed.

  • Total duration of awakenings: Sum up the total time you were awake during the night in minutes.

  • What time was your final awakening? Indicate the time you woke up and stayed awake.

  • What time did you get out of bed to start your day? Record the time you got out of bed after your final awakening.

  • Sleep Interferences: Note anything that disrupted your sleep, such as alcohol, caffeine, naps, pain, worries, electronics, or interruptions.

Did you know?
"Sleep is the best meditation". – Dalai Lama.

Optimize Your Circadian Health

We hope these tips help you improve your sleep, mood, and overall well-being in the next few weeks.
Try them all and see how they improve your circadian health quickly.

If you found this article helpful, check out more of our content here.

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