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Adding This 5-Minute Task to My Bedtime Routine Helps Me Fall Asleep in 15 Minutes

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Adding This 5-Minute Task to My Bedtime Routine Helps Me Fall Asleep in 15 Minutes

Adam has been covering streaming services since 2013 and wants to help people navigate the subscription creep in their lives.

Not being able to fall asleep can create a vicious cycle. You find yourself lying in bed, watching the clock and worrying about not getting enough sleep and how it will affect your energy the next day. This then makes it even harder for you to fall asleep, and the cycle continues.

When I was in high school, I especially struggled with sleep and would lie awake for hours trying to rest. Most nights, I rarely got more than four hours of sleep. But I'm not alone. Insomnia is said to affect almost half the population, and though I never got a professional insomnia diagnosis, the struggle affected me every night.

Fortunately, over time, I managed to regain control of my sleep schedule, and now, on most nights, I fall asleep within 15 minutes. Many things in my life have changed since then, but one particular change had a shockingly positive effect on my ability to fall asleep: I started writing to-do lists every night before bed.

I started those lists because I had a lot to keep track of each day. But as it turned out, there's some science that suggests nightly to-do lists may help people fall asleep faster. I dug into some of the research and also spoke with a sleep medicine doctor about the benefits of good sleep and what people can do to sleep better.

When I started making nightly to-do lists, I didn't have any idea it was going to help me sleep -- I just wanted a way to better track my priorities and productivity from day to day. So every night before bed, I would write down three things I wanted to do the next day. I would also note one good thing that happened during the day, no matter how small. The whole process takes me five minutes at most.

I later learned there may be a connection between clearing our minds and falling asleep. According to a study by researchers from Baylor and Emory universities, making a list of upcoming tasks can help you fall asleep faster.

The Baylor and Emory study looked at people who journaled before bed about completed tasks and activities and compared them with a second group who made a to-do list of things they needed to do over the next day or two before bed. The study showed that writing to-do lists helped people fall asleep significantly faster than writing about completed activities.

The researchers speculate that writing out to-do lists eases the stress and anxiety about upcoming events that tend to keep people up at night. In short, writing things down can help offload worries from your brain onto the page.

If you're curious about other ways to get a good night's sleep, I spoke with Dr. Saroja Sripathi, sleep medicine chair for Kaiser Permanente Northern California, for other ideas. She said good sleep is a matter of three factors: the quality of sleep you get, how long you sleep and the timing of your sleep. The best way to maximize all three is to focus on what sleep experts call "sleep hygiene," the behaviors that help you sleep better.

The decisions we make throughout the day -- such as what and when we drink, how much we eat and when we go to bed -- affect our ability to sleep at night.

If you have trouble falling asleep at night, Sripathi has research-backed recommendations for improving your sleep quality:

If you've tried these techniques and are still having issues sleeping, it might be time to seek professional help. Your doctor can work with you to diagnose and treat any potential issues.

Getting good and sufficient sleep can be a challenge. For most of us, there's usually more to do than we can fit in a day, and it's tempting to cut time out of the 7-plus hours that experts recommend adults sleep every night. But how important is sleep, really?

Sripathi told me that sleep affects more than just how rested you feel the next day. "Our overall physical and emotional well-being is affected by sleep," she said, so it's important to prioritize sleep.

Hearing about the benefits of good sleep made me appreciate just how much influence sleep has on our lives. Here are a few things Sripathi said sleep affects:

By creating a good sleep environment and building healthy sleep habits, you have a good chance of helping to program your body to sleep better at night. For me, making a to-do list for the next day was a helpful part of that programming, and I've been snoozing much more easily ever since.

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