I also have a sunrise alarm. It makes early morning wake ups so much more natural.
Stop Drinking
This is a place to motivate each other to control or stop drinking. It is also a place for non drinkers to discuss and share.
We welcome anyone who wishes to join in by asking for advice, sharing our experiences and stories, or just encouraging someone who is trying to quit or cut down.
Please post only when sober; you’re welcome to read in the meanwhile.
Parent and casual-but-a-bit-too-frequeny drinker here.
I totally agree that having good habits around sleep is really important. You see it in your kids - a consistent routine makes bedtime a lot easier. Have an activity that pushes bedtime out or compresses the routine? It takes even longer for the kids to wind down and fall asleep. There's also a sweet spot - if you catch them getting tired and it's around bed time put them to sleep. If you wait they'll get overtired and getting them to go to sleep will be a struggle.
None of that changes as you get older. Having a consistent daily cadence will make it easier to have good sleep highine.
That said, if you have younger kids you'll find yourself trading your own sleep for personal time, which then just makes it harder to fall asleep. That glass of wine you alluded to is absolutely a bandaid.
I had sleep apnea. Before I quit drinking, I was stopping breathing 7 times an hour and needed a CPAP device. . A year after I quit, I was down to stopping breathing once every OTHER hour.
I still use the CPAP device because I never store with it and that makes my wife happy. I don't really need it anymore according to my Dr.
There is also the wandering brain issue. As pointed out in many memes, our brains love to think of the dumbest shit when we are trying to get to sleep.
Preparing for sleep with a healthy environment is absolutely paramount in regards to OPs message and I don't want to distract from that.
I am an engineer by trade, mostly in IT related work, and I like complicated or unsolvable problems. I'll pick one to think about while I am trying to sleep. For some, this might be counterproductive and could end up keeping you awake! For me, it keeps my brain locked on to one topic and away from drifting between various social issues of my past.
For several months, I dissected protein folding/replication and theorized ways the process could self-evolve on a new planet. Recently, it's been about singularities and how to visualize the core of a star as it implodes into infinity. You get the point: These are subjects that are extremely interesting to me and I need my brain completely detached from my daily troubles to think about this stuff in depth.
I didn't say I was actually solving problems and I am absolutely not an astrophysicist. It's distraction, plain and simple and is essentially no different than counting sheep but in hard-mode. In many ways, this just helps stir the visualization part of my brain that almost always is a doorway into actual sleep.
This was probably too many words to describe what is essentially forced day dreaming.