light_mode1 · Light is your master clock
Deep in your brain sits the suprachiasmatic nucleus — a cluster of cells that keeps a roughly 24-hour rhythm called your circadian rhythm. It governs when you feel alert, when you feel sleepy, your body temperature, and the daily rise and fall of hormones like cortisol and melatonin. Left in a cave with no time cues, that clock drifts slightly off 24 hours. What keeps it accurate is light.
Bright light in the morning anchors the clock and pulls it earlier, helping you feel awake by day and sleepy at a sensible hour at night. Bright, blue-rich light in the evening does the opposite: it suppresses melatonin — the hormone that signals "night" — and pushes the clock later, so you're wired when you want to be winding down. Screens are a meaningful evening source of exactly this kind of light.
Seek light early. Dim it late. Almost everything else in sleep hygiene is a footnote to that one rule.
LumAlarm is built around this: a strong morning light cue to anchor the clock, and a warm, blue-light-free wind-down to protect melatonin at night.
cyclone2 · You sleep in cycles
Sleep isn't a flat plateau; it moves in cycles of roughly 90 minutes. Each cycle descends from light sleep into deep slow-wave sleep — the physically restorative stage — and back up into REM sleep, where most vivid dreaming happens and memory is consolidated. You repeat this four to six times a night, with more deep sleep early and more REM toward morning.
Waking matters because of where in the cycle it happens. Surfacing during light sleep feels natural and easy. Being dragged out of deep slow-wave sleep produces the worst sleep inertia. You can't perfectly predict your cycles, but you can hedge: instead of one hard wake moment, give yourself a 20–30 minute wake window and let gentle cues — light first, then optional motion-aware smart wake — catch you while you're already stirring.
- arrow_rightAim for a number of hours that lands you near the top of a cycle — many people do well around 7–9 hours, but the right number is personal.
- arrow_rightA wake window beats a wake instant: it trades a 1-in-a-bad-stage gamble for a soft landing.
hourglass_top3 · Why you get sleepy at all
Two systems decide how sleepy you feel, and it helps to picture them as separate dials. The first is the circadian clock from chapter one — your daily rhythm of alertness. The second is sleep pressure: a chemical called adenosine builds up in your brain the longer you're awake, and that mounting pressure is what makes sleep feel irresistible by bedtime. Sleeping clears it; you wake with the dial near zero.
Caffeine works by blocking adenosine's signal — it doesn't remove the pressure, it just hides it, which is why a crash arrives when the caffeine wears off. Naps relieve pressure too, which is great for alertness but can backfire if a long, late nap drains so much pressure that you can't fall asleep at night. Short and early is the rule for naps.
wb_twilight4 · Larks, owls, and everyone between
Your chronotype is your natural tendency toward earlier or later sleep, and it's largely biological — partly genetic, and shifting across your life (teenagers run late; many people drift earlier with age). A night owl forced onto a lark's schedule isn't being lazy; they're fighting their own clock.
You can nudge your chronotype earlier with consistent morning light, an earlier wind-down, and protecting evening darkness — but only so far, and gradually. The kinder move is to work with it where life allows, and use strategic light to shift gently when it doesn't. A gradual sunrise is far easier on a misaligned clock than a sudden alarm in your biological night.
event_repeat5 · Consistency beats everything
If you change one thing, change this: keep your wake time consistent — ideally within about an hour, even on weekends. A steady wake time is the strongest daily anchor for your circadian clock, and a stable clock makes falling asleep at night easier, which makes waking easier, which stabilises the clock further. It compounds.
Big weekend lie-ins create social jetlag: shifting your sleep two or three hours later on Saturday and Sunday is, to your body, like flying west for the weekend and back. Come Monday you're jet-lagged without having travelled. If you're short on sleep, a small consistent adjustment beats one heroic lie-in every time.
keyThe one habit worth building first
- check_circlePick a wake time you can keep 7 days a week and hold it within ±1 hour.
- check_circleCatch up on sleep by going to bed earlier, not by waking later.
self_improvement6 · Build a wind-down ritual
Sleep is a landing, not a switch. In the 30–60 minutes before bed, your job is to send your body the cues that night has arrived: dim the lights, lower the stimulation, drop the temperature a little. Warm, low light supports melatonin; bright overhead light and bright screens work against it. A short, repeatable routine matters more than any single step, because repetition trains your brain to associate those cues with sleep.
- arrow_rightDim the lights and switch to warm tones an hour before bed.
- arrow_rightPut demanding screens down, or at least take the blue and brightness out of them.
- arrow_rightDo the same few calming things in the same order — reading, stretching, a warm glow.
- arrow_rightLet an auto-dimming light fade to zero so you don't have to get up to turn it off.
LumAlarm's sunset mode is built for exactly this last step — a warm glow that eases to darkness on its own as you fall asleep.
local_cafe7 · Caffeine, alcohol & timing
Caffeine has a half-life of roughly five to six hours, so half of a 2 pm coffee can still be circulating at 8 pm. If you're sensitive, draw a line in the early afternoon. The goal isn't to quit — it's to stop caffeine from quietly thinning your sleep without you connecting the dots.
Alcohol is the more deceptive one. It can help you fall asleep faster, which is why it feels like it helps — but it fragments the second half of the night, suppresses REM early, and causes more awakenings later, leaving sleep shallower overall. Large, late meals can disrupt sleep similarly. None of this needs perfection; often just shifting the timing earlier is enough to feel a difference.
bedroom_parent8 · Your bedroom environment
The best sleep environments are cool, dark, and quiet. A slightly cool room — around 18 °C / 65 °F suits many people — supports the natural drop in core temperature that sleep depends on. Darkness protects melatonin, so block stray light or wear an eye mask. Quiet, or a steady gentle background sound, prevents the micro-awakenings that fragment a night without you remembering them.
And keep the phone's bright, demanding, notification-spewing screen out of arm's reach. That's not just willpower advice — it's the strongest argument for a light-led alarm. The phone belongs across the room, working as a silent sunrise, not glowing in your hand at 1 am.
flight_takeoff9 · When life fights the clock
Shift work, early starts, and travel all force your schedule against your body clock, and here strategic light is your most powerful tool. The principle is simple even when the logistics aren't: get bright light when you need to be alert, and protect darkness when you need to sleep — even if that sleep is in the daytime.
- arrow_rightShift work: bright light at the start of your shift; blackout curtains and an eye mask for daytime sleep; anchor a consistent core sleep block.
- arrow_rightFlying east (harder): seek morning light at your destination to pull your clock earlier.
- arrow_rightFlying west (easier): get evening light to push your clock later, and resist sleeping too early.
- arrow_rightAdaptive, gradual light shifts you more comfortably than a jarring alarm in your biological night.