You have been exhausted all day but the moment your head hits the pillow, your mind switches on and sleep just does not come. If this sounds familiar, you are not alone.
Here is what is actually going on:
Your body produces a hormone called cortisol. Think of it as your internal alarm clock.
Every morning it is supposed to rise, wake you up, and carry you through your day and then as evening arrives it gradually fades so your body can relax and prepare for sleep. When it works the way it should, falling asleep feels effortless.
But when your body has been under sustained pressure, whether from stress, poor diet, or simply the wear and tear of daily life, that rhythm gets disrupted. Instead of being high in the morning and low at night it flips. You drag through the morning, get a slight lift in the afternoon, and then around 9 or 10 at night something shifts. A second wind arrives, your thoughts start racing and you feel almost restless despite being completely drained.
That second wind is not energy. It is your alarm system firing at the wrong time.
The good news is this is not permanent and it is not something you simply have to accept.
Here is what actually helps restore a healthy rhythm:
• Get outside in natural sunlight within the first 30 minutes of waking. This is one of the most powerful ways to reset your internal clock for the entire day
• Keep the same sleep and wake time every day. Consistency trains your body back into its natural rhythm faster than almost anything else
• Remove processed foods and sugar from your daily routine. The low grade inflammation they create keeps your alarm system activated long after it should have switched off
And if a doctor has told you your cortisol is normal based on a single blood test, know that one reading at one moment in the day tells you almost nothing because the rhythm is what matters and that requires looking at it across the full day. 🔬
Your body is not failing you.
It is responding to what life has been giving it and when you change the inputs, the rhythm follows 💡