Today’s Solutions: July 06, 2026

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM

You know that moment when you look up from your phone, realize it’s well past midnight, and think, “not again”? You meant to be in bed an hour ago. It just didn’t happen.

For roughly one in three American adults, that’s not the occasional slip. It’s the pattern. And while there’s no shortage of advice about sleep hygiene and screen limits, most of it asks you to white-knuckle your way through the evening on willpower alone.

A bedtime alarm works differently. Instead of relying on discipline, you set a signal in advance and let your earlier, better-rested self make the call.

Start with a wind-down alarm, not a bedtime alarm

The most effective version of this habit is actually two alarms, not one. The first rings about 30 to 60 minutes before you want to be asleep. Not a command. Just a nudge to start transitioning. Brush your teeth. Set out your clothes for tomorrow. Move at a slower speed.

The second alarm, if you need it, is the firmer one: time to be in bed.

When you treat sleep as a process rather than an abrupt switch, your body has time to catch up. You’re not trying to force anything. You’re just making the conditions right so sleep can happen on its own.

Consistency matters more than you’d expect

Research from 2024 found that regular sleep patterns, meaning consistent bedtimes and wake times, are associated with lower risk of cancer, cardiovascular disease, and all-cause mortality. The part that might surprise you: regularity was a stronger predictor of those outcomes than total sleep time. Your body keeps score on consistency more than quantity.

A bedtime alarm makes that easier. Set it once, keep the time steady on weekends when you can, and over time your body starts anticipating the wind-down before the alarm even sounds.

The phone is usually the real problem

The barrier to an earlier bedtime usually isn’t intention. It’s the scroll. A 2022 study found that heavier phone use was tied to worse sleep quality and longer delays before reaching deeper sleep stages.

So set a “phone away” alarm alongside the wind-down one. When it goes off, plug your phone in across the room and switch to Do Not Disturb. Label it “off screens” or “phone away” so it reads as a real instruction, not something to tap away. That one swap tends to make the rest of the evening a lot easier.

Your environment does half the work

Once the alarm goes off, the easier your space is to settle into, the less effort it takes to follow through. Lower the lights. Trade the overhead glare for a bedside lamp. Move your phone to the other side of the room.

None of these feel like dramatic changes in the moment. But they matter, because your body needs fewer cues to wind down when the room already feels like the end of the day.

If your current bedtime is much later than you’d like, move it back by 15 to 20 minutes every few nights rather than all at once. Gradual tends to stick. Your body gets a chance to settle into the new rhythm instead of bracing against it.

 

 

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