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3 Morning Habits That Will Build Better Sleep Tonight

  • Writer: Dan Hughes
    Dan Hughes
  • Nov 10
  • 3 min read

A good night’s sleep doesn’t start when your head hits the pillow. It starts as soon as you wake up. The choices you make in the first few hours of your day send strong signals to your body about when to feel energised and when to wind down. If your mornings are chaotic, rushed, or dominated by indoor light and screens, your body’s internal clock can lose its rhythm, making it harder to fall asleep and stay asleep later on.

Let’s begin by breaking down 3 morning habits that build better sleep tonight.


A person lying on a yoga mat with one hand on their chest and one on their belly, practicing relaxed breathing.

Understanding Your Body’s Clock for Better Sleep

Your circadian rhythm is your body’s internal operating system. It regulates sleep, hormones, mood, digestion, immune function and even temperature. It runs on a roughly 24-hour cycle and depends on external cues like:

  • Light exposure

  • Meal timing

  • Daily movement

  • Breath and nervous system state

Your circadian rhythm is incredibly adaptive, but also delicately tuned. It thrives on consistency, natural light, and gentle structure.

When you protect it, you’ll feel clearer, calmer, and more energised throughout the day, and sleep comes much more easily at night.



Habit 1: Get Natural Light Into Your Eyes Early

The single most powerful sleep-supporting behaviour you can do is get outside into natural morning light.


Morning light exposure:

  • Suppresses melatonin (the sleep hormone)

  • Boosts cortisol naturally (your “wake-up” hormone)

  • Resets your sleep-wake cycle so you feel tired at the right time later

Little or no natural light in the morning pushes melatonin release later in the day, leading to afternoon crashes and in some cases, insomnia.


What to do:

  • Within the first 5–30 minutes of waking, go outside.

  • No sunglasses, no looking through windows (glass blocks the spectrum your brain needs).

  • Don’t stare directly at the sun. Just face the direction of daylight.

    (WARNING - obviously, sunlight is powerful and can be dangerous to look at directly - facing the sun, without directly looking at it is enough, don’t put your eyesight into any danger)


How long:

  • 10–15 minutes if it's sunny

  • 20–30 minutes if it’s cloudy


Habit 2: Stack Light Exposure With Breathwork

While you’re outside, add slow, nasal breathing to regulate your nervous system.

Try this:

  • Inhale through your nose for 5 seconds

  • Exhale through your nose for 5 seconds

  • Keep the breath light, gentle, and quiet


This signals safety in the body, lowers stress chemistry, and sets your system on a calmer track for the day. Which makes sleep, later on, easier.


Habit 3: Add Grounding for Even Better Reset

If possible, stand with your bare feet directly on natural ground (grass, soil, sand).

Grounding may help:

  • Calm the nervous system

  • Reduce inflammation

  • Support circadian alignment


Think of it as connecting back to the natural cues your body is wired for.



Easy Ways to Fit This Into Everyday Life

Make it seamless by pairing light exposure with something you’re already doing:

  • Walking the dog

  • Taking the bins out

  • Walking to the train or car

  • Morning coffee outside instead of at the table (although, don’t have your coffee too early after waking - why? Come back for Part 2 of this series to find out!)


If You Had a Bad Night’s Sleep…

Don’t chase sleep. Don’t overthink it. Don’t try to “fix” it during the night.

Simply start again with morning light.

Your body is always ready to reset.


People lying on a yoga mat with both hands on their stomach practicing relaxed breathing.

Final Thought

Every morning is a new chance to guide your body into rhythm. Your sleep tonight begins with how you greet the day.


Gentle, consistent morning light + calm breathing + grounded awareness = a body that knows when to rise and when to rest.


Start tomorrow. Step outside. Breathe. Let your system remember what it already knows.


Part two of this three-part blog series, coming soon…

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