A doctor has revealed that one of the worst mistakes you can make after waking during the night is immediately reaching for your phone.

Waking suddenly in the middle of the night is common and usually harmless. During deep sleep, the body is relaxed and restored, but “without warning, something shifts… You are awake.” These moments, called Middle-of-the-Night (MOTN) awakenings, often pass quickly unless something interrupts the return to sleep. For many people, that interruption is checking the time.

Looking at the clock can quickly turn calm wakefulness into stress. Seeing the hour triggers anxious thoughts such as “How many hours until my alarm?” and “What if I don’t fall back asleep?” This habit, known as temporal monitoring, pushes the brain into alert mode. The body releases stress hormones, raising heart rate and body temperature, which makes sleep harder. As the article explains, “The brain does not treat information about insufficient sleep as neutral data. It often interprets it as threat.”

Using a phone worsens the problem. Screens emit blue light that signals daytime to the brain, suppressing melatonin, the hormone that promotes sleep. Even short exposure can increase alertness and delay sleep. “Even brief light exposure can blunt that peak,” making it harder to drift off again.

If wakefulness continues, frustration builds. Over time, the brain may associate the bed with stress instead of rest, a process called conditioned arousal. To break this cycle, experts suggest getting out of bed after 15–20 minutes, using dim light, and doing a calm activity until sleepiness returns. This helps retrain the brain so the bed becomes linked only with sleep.

Acceptance also plays a powerful role. Struggling to force sleep often backfires. Instead, calm thoughts like “I’m awake right now. That’s okay” reduce stress and allow natural sleep processes to resume. “Sleep is a passive biological process. It cannot be forced through effort.”

The key strategies are simple: avoid checking the time, limit light exposure, get out of bed if fully awake, keep a consistent wake time, and practice acceptance. By doing so, nighttime awakenings become brief pauses rather than long battles. As the article concludes, “The clock promises certainty but delivers pressure. Let the night remain unmeasured.”

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