Sleeping through the night is essential for feeling productive and refreshed. Yet many people wake between 3:00am and 5:00am, only to struggle falling back asleep. This common experience often leads to frustration and next-day fatigue. While it may seem random, this pattern has both cultural and biological explanations.
This early-morning window is known as “the hour of the wolf,” a phrase made famous by Swedish director Ingmar Bergman in his film of the same name. He described it as “the hour between night and dawn… when most people die, sleep is deepest, nightmares are most real. It is the hour when the sleepless are haunted by their worst anguish, when ghosts and demons are most powerful. The hour of the wolf is also the hour when most babies are born.” The phrase reflects long-standing folklore that views this period as a mysterious crossroads between endings and beginnings.
Beyond legend, biology plays a key role. During the night, circadian rhythms regulate body temperature, blood pressure, and metabolism. Around 4:00am, these functions reach their lowest point. The body is in its deepest state of rest, and its defenses are more relaxed. For vulnerable individuals, this low point can make awakenings more likely.
Folk traditions also call this time the “witching hour” or “devil’s hour,” linking it to heightened supernatural activity. While these ideas are symbolic, they add to the uneasy feeling some people experience when waking at this time.
For sound sleepers, the hour passes unnoticed in deep rest. But for those prone to anxiety, worries can feel amplified. Understanding both the body’s natural rhythms and the cultural myths surrounding these hours helps explain why waking between 3:00am and 5:00am can feel so intense—it’s shaped by both biology and imagination.