Challenge Update: Late to bed, not early to rise. I got up and started my coffee, then made the mistake of laying down for “just a few more minutes” while it brewed.
Not a good idea.
What is so difficult about consistency in getting up early? Let’s look at the factors.
Physical Factors
- Physical Weariness/Fatigue: Fatigue is caused by more than just how much sleep you get; unfortunately, most of us always attribute weariness to lack of sleep without considering other causes. Psychologically, then, if you experience lots of fatigue during the day, you’re much less likely to want to get up when the alarm goes off. The rationalization goes like this: I was so tired yesterday. I’m not productive when I’m that tired. I hate being tired. If I sleep in just a little longer, I won’t be so tired today. Sometimes, lack of sleep is the problem, but this should be addressed by adjusting your bedtime, not by hitting snooze five times in the morning. That “extra” sleep usually isn’t sufficient for another REM cycle anyway and won’t make you feel any more rested.
- Diet, Nutrition, and Exercise: Lots of processed food, lots of sugar, refined flours, fast food, greasy food, and too much caffeine give your body lots of hard work and can cause you to feel sluggish, unenergized, and unmotivated. Regular exercise, even if only for fifteen or twenty minutes a day, will boost energy.
- Amount of Sleep Needed: We all have this “eight hours of sleep” programmed into our brains from childhood. However, eight hours is not always an accurate estimate of how much sleep you need. People are different, and people’s needs change during the course of life. An article from WebMD points out that eight hours is an average gained from a classic sleep study, and that there are long sleepers (those who need nine or more hours) and short sleepers (those who need five to six hours).
- Sickness and Special Physical Conditions: When you’re sick, your body needs more rest because it is working harder than normal to fight off infection. Listen, and go to bed earlier, take naps, turn off your alarm, and do what you need to do in order to get extra rest. Special physical conditions such as pregnancy also create a need for additional sleep; the body is working hard to provide for a new little life. Naps and earlier bedtimes help a lot.
Mental and Emotional Factors
- Continual Stress: Situations that create anxiety, especially when the situation is ongoing, can cause debilitating weariness. Stress comes from work situations, loss of job, family crisis, relationship problems, financial problems or even things not tagged as problems: moving, changing careers, remodeling, major holidays, adoption, pregnancy, etc. Any situation that brings change, good or bad, also brings stress. Your emotional defense to this stress can be the “find a cave and hide” reaction, and it sends a strong message via physical weariness. This kind of reaction is especially common if you, like me, are a person who avoids conflict.
- Lack of Vision: Having no purpose, no vision for the day or week or month or year or life, or having a purpose but no plan for implementation will make it difficult to get yourself moving in the morning. If you have no reason, no goal that you are seeking to accomplish, no drive, then you have no motivation. You have no reason to get moving, and you also probably have depression because of a lack of defined purpose.
- Intimidating Project: Perhaps you have purpose, and a plan, but you also have a challenge waiting for you at work or at home. It could be a project you enjoy but that takes a long time and doesn’t show much progress. It could be a challenge that you don’t feel adequate to tackle. The knowledge that something big, overwhelming, and discouraging waits for you makes staying in bed much more appealing.
Environmental Factors
- Clutter: A messy room, home, and work environment sends strong messages that you can’t really ignore. Clutter makes you feel out of control even if you aren’t. It makes you take serious things less seriously; if your home or office isn’t important enough to keep neat and clean, then how important are the activities that take place within it? Waking up to a messy room tells you that you are already starting out behind.
- Lack of Light: A room with no windows or very heavy drapes that allow no sunlight creates a perpetual night. Light is the natural wake-up call. If you don’t have any in your room, you are sabotaging your own efforts.
- Weather: Hibernation instincts kick in during winter, especially on those gray days. Dark, rainy days anytime of year tend to make the bed feel much more comfortable.
- Family Habits: If your night-owl husband keeps you up too late and then sleeps peacefully through the alarm, it’s going to be much more difficult for you to bound out of bed and start your day. If you have children and no morning or evening routines, you’re creating even more difficulty.
- Social Obligations: Staying out too late with friends, not to mention the unpleasant effects of too much alcohol, work against your getting up early efforts.
- Bad Alarm Clock Set-Up: You need an alarm clock you can hear and cannot ignore (it should be very annoying); you need to put it close enough to wake you up but too far away to turn off without getting out of bed. If you can sleep through your alarm or hit the snooze button without lifting your head, you will still be in bed an hour after it rings.
Help Yourself
Don’t be a slave to habits that work against your efforts. Change a few things (the ones that made you nod and say, Oooh, that’s my problem) and renew your efforts to get up early.
- Drink lots of water during the day. Keep a bottle handy and refill it every time you empty it. Make yourself drink a glass of water before you have a soda or a coffee or a snack.
- Drink no caffeine after noon. Caffeine’s effects can hit you much later than you think. Too much caffeine isn’t good for you anyway, so get what you want in the morning and drink decaf after lunch. Better yet, drink water after lunch!
- Cut out fast food. If it’s a habit, then let yourself have fast food once a week, maybe for a treat on Saturday or something. Otherwise, don’t eat it.
- Cut out processed food for snacks. Eat fresh fruit and vegetables instead.
- Add a salad to your daily lunch or dinner, or to both. Eat your salad first.
- Get some exercise. Fifteen or twenty minutes is great. Start somewhere. Walk in the park. Get some exercise videos. Walk in the mall. Get some hand weights or an aerobic band. Dance.
- Don’t worry about a bedtime; go to sleep when you’re sleepy.
- Don’t talk about or deal with stressful matters at night. Turn off the phone ringer if you have to. Do things that are calming, repetitive, and relaxing. Don’t watch movies that are disturbing.
- Keep a notebook and pen handy at night. If you think of something to do, someone to call, whatever, write it down. That way your brain won’t feel like it has to remember and you can continue to relax.
- Use a planner and make a plan. Jot down your morning get-up time in your planner, and a short to-do list for the next day. Leave it out on the kitchen table or by the coffee maker so you see it first thing in the morning.
- Find your purpose.
- Get help with your challenging projects. Have a friend come over to help you paint or cook pies or whatever. Schedule a meeting to work on a project together. Make a date with your spouse to do taxes. Don’t tackle this stuff alone.
- Balance your day with long-progress projects and immediate- gratification items. Do something every day that allows you to see immediate results.
- Clean up your bedroom, including the closet. Take everything out of your room except what you need for dressing, sleeping, and sex. If you must, keep a couple of books by your bed; but don’t bring in a whole library and definitely don’t bring in work papers.
- Simplify your decor. Soft, muted colors are relaxing.
- Plan a special “reward” for yourself on nasty-weather days. Buy yourself a latte or have a cinnamon roll or rent a movie on the way home as a reward for getting yourself out of bed on those icky, rainy days. But you don’t get the reward if you didn’t get up on time!
- Tell your spouse you need help. If you’re dealing with a night-owl spouse, just let him know that you’re going to go to bed a little earlier than he does. Then when you get sleepy, go to bed. It’s okay. He’ll still love you.
- Set up routines for your children. Morning and evening. Nights will go smoother, they’ll get to bed on time, you can relax and get a good night’s sleep. Mornings will be easier and hassle-free and you won’t have to dread them anymore.
- Limit your social obligations. If you know it’s going to be later than you want to be, just say no. Save it for the weekend. Stay home more. Play with your kids. Talk to your husband. Knit something. Call your aunt in Nebraska. Write a letter to your sister (she’ll be amazed). Watch a good movie. Be a homebody during the week. It’s okay to slow your life down.
- Open the curtains, or get new ones. Let in some morning light.
- Get a good alarm clock, and set it up where you can see it but not touch it from your bed.
- Set up your coffee maker at night. When your alarm goes off, get up, turn it off, flip on your coffee maker, and don’t even think about going back to bed while it brews!

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