yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

Can you change your sleep schedule?


3m read
·Nov 8, 2024

Here we see an early bird and a night owl in their natural habitats. The early bird rises with the sun, springing out of bed abuzz with energy. As the day goes on, they slowly get more and more exhausted until finally crashing around sunset.

Meanwhile, the night owl rises long after the sun, stumbling groggily from their bed. After about 30 minutes—or a cup of coffee—they begin to come to life. But they don’t really hit their stride until later in the day, at which point they comfortably coast past sunset, only heading to bed in the early hours of the morning.

For many, this is a familiar story, and one that’s easy to cast yourself in. But how many people are truly night owls or early birds? And are our natural sleep schedules predetermined at birth, or can we change them? The truth is there’s a lot of space between these extremes, and most people fall somewhere in the middle.

These behaviors are determined by our circadian system—which is anchored by a pair of nerve cell clusters located in the anterior hypothalamus. These nerve cells respond to light exposure coming in through your eyes to track the day-night cycle that dictates your body’s internal clock, or circadian rhythm. That steady rhythm helps determine the body’s flow of hormones, with the broader circadian system acting like a conductor that keeps your organs functioning in time with one another.

And a major part of that performance is managing the body’s transitions between being awake and being asleep. Now, your circadian system can't just decide its bedtime and knock you out. However, by tracking how much light you typically get and when in your waking hours you usually get it, the system can make predictions about when you’re likely to need sleep and prepare your body accordingly.

For example, if you consistently go to sleep around 10 pm, your circadian system will start producing sleep-inducing melatonin around two hours before then to tell your body it’s time for bed. So if this rhythm is molded by our sleep habits, can we change it just by sticking to a strict schedule? To a degree.

Everyone’s bodies are unique, so even two people with the same sleep schedule might have different experiences based on their circadian system’s hormonal quirks. For example, where early birds generally flood with cortisol just before waking up, night owls often have their cortisol peak roughly 30 minutes after getting up. Hormonal differences like these determine how you experience your circadian rhythm.

And while these factors can shift with age, you’re unlikely to grow out of your body’s preferred sleep schedule. That said, you can cultivate habits to help or hinder your circadian rhythm. Keeping consistent sleeping hours helps your body accurately predict when to send out hormones, making it easier to stick to your schedule.

Conversely, research in sleep deprived college students has found their unpredictable sleeping habits weaken their entire circadian system. Compromised circadian rhythms are less effective at coordinating organ functioning and can incur health risks like metabolic disorders and vulnerable immune systems.

But perhaps just as important as sleep hygiene is light hygiene. Getting sufficient contrast between bright daylight and dimmer nighttime light is essential for synchronizing your circadian rhythm, and nothing establishes this contrast better than sunlight. Even on overcast days, sunlight is much brighter than standard indoor lighting. So if you're typically awake during the day, try getting outside as soon as possible to teach your body when to be active and alert.

It’s difficult to maintain a sleep schedule that pushes against your body’s preferences. And even if you succeed for months, it only takes one bad night to send your circadian system back to baseline. But whether you’re an early bird, night owl, or somewhere in between, it’s important to remember that as long as you’re consistent, there’s no wrong time to wake up or go to sleep. What matters most is getting enough rest for the day ahead.

More Articles

View All
Why India is a Rising Power
If you were to look at China and India, and those two countries specifically, um, and you were to handicap them, as you are uniquely qualified to do, maybe you could just broadly handicap India versus China for us. This is a topic we’ve been talking about…
Quantitative electrolysis | Applications of thermodynamics | AP Chemistry | Khan Academy
We already know that in an electrolytic cell, current or movement of electrons is used to drive a redox reaction. If we look at a generic reduction half-reaction, the stoichiometry of the half-reaction shows how many electrons are needed to reduce a gener…
Asking Billionaires How They Got Rich! (Houston)
Who am I here with today? Damon John. Kendra Scott, are you a business owner? I am. I’m one of only 20 female founders in the United States that have founded a billion-dollar brand. So you founded a billion-dollar company? A billion-dollar company, with a…
David Rusenko at Startup School 2012
Well, thanks for having me, guys. Uh, you can hear me all right? Cool. So, I wanted to start by just uh, going over the Weebly story a little bit, telling you uh, kind of how we got to where we got to today and some of the lessons we learned along the wa…
MIT Dean of Admissions, Stu Schill, says the perfect applicant doesn't exist | Homeroom with Sal
Hi everyone, Sal Khan here from Khan Academy. Welcome to our daily homeroom live stream. For those of y’all who are new, this is something that we started doing, it feels like a lifetime ago now, almost two and a half months ago, when we started seeing sc…
Safari Live - Day 27 | National Geographic
The whole thing, the grass, everything, so it’s going to change rapidly once we get that rain, particularly with temperatures like this. This is great temperatures for the growth of vegetation, but they need water for that to happen. At the moment, there …