logo
Why You Shouldn't Sleep In When You're Tired—and What to Do Instead

Why You Shouldn't Sleep In When You're Tired—and What to Do Instead

Yahoo20-05-2025

Reviewed by Dietitian Kelly Plowe, M.S., RDHitting the snooze button in the a.m. may do more harm than good. Experts share what to do instead.
Hydrating before coffee, exercising and getting outside in the morning are better-for-you options.
Limiting alcohol before bed and getting enough vitamin D, omega-3s and glycine can help too.If you struggle to log enough zzz's on a nightly basis, you're not alone. Almost 40% of Americans fall short of the recommended minimum of seven hours. Not getting enough sleep means the mornings can be rough, leaving you tempted to hit the snooze button. But falling back asleep for a few extra minutes of slumber could be doing more harm than good.
According to Melissa Jaeger, RD, LD, 'Sleeping in might sound like the ultimate fix when you're tired, but it can actually backfire. Our bodies thrive on routine, especially when it comes to sleep. Oversleeping disrupts your natural circadian rhythm, which can leave you feeling groggier and less energized—almost like a 'sleep hangover.''
The good news is, there are science-backed strategies you can try when you're fighting that urge to sleep in. Read on to hear what nutrition experts encourage their clients—and you—to try instead.
Related: Is 6 Hours of Sleep Enough? Here's What Experts Say
Dehydration can impact the quality of your sleep. So, if you wake up tired and are tempted to hit snooze, drink a glass of water instead. Hydrating first thing in the morning can break that—dehydration, poor sleep, wake up tired, snooze button—cycle. The best part? A glass of water in the morning is a quick and inexpensive fix.
Jessica Cording, M.S., RD, CDN, IFNCP, agrees that morning hydration is key: 'I usually recommend drinking a big glass of water when you wake up (before you have coffee) to hydrate. When we're tired, we're more likely to be dehydrated, and our cells need a little extra help so they can do all the jobs they have to do to take care of us.' A critical note to make here: Cording isn't saying no coffee. Instead, she suggests embracing the motto 'water before caffeine' to make sure you're starting your day off on the right foot and are setting yourself up for a solid night of slumber.
Related: The Best Tea for Better Sleep, Recommended by Dietitians
Exercise is not only good for your physical health—it can affect your mood and energy levels for your entire day. Jaeger and Cording recommend fitting in a form of movement first thing in the morning to fight off fatigue and reenergize your body. Science supports this, too. A systematic review and meta-analysis of 81 studies found that individuals who adopted a moderate-intensity fitness program noticed improvements in their energy levels and vitality with decreased feelings of fatigue. Being active gets oxygen moving throughout your body, increasing your blood flow. Exercise also stimulates endorphins, that feel-good neurotransmitter that tells your brain, 'Hey, this makes me happy!'
Jaeger explains that your level of tiredness will likely dictate what form of movement you may find better that day, but she stresses that, whatever it is, fit it in: 'Whether it's going for a walk, a yoga session or a strength-training class, getting active early not only sets a positive tone for the day by improving energy levels and decreasing fatigue, but also supports better sleep quality at night.'
Related: The 8 Best Stretches for a Better Night's Sleep, According to a Personal Trainer
If you're tempted to hit snooze, hoping those few extra minutes of sleep will give you the energy you're lacking, focus on breakfast instead. Your first meal of the morning is literally 'breaking your fast,' delivering the fuel and nutrients your body needs for energy to start the day.
Jaeger explains how a healthy breakfast can impact energy levels throughout the day. 'Incorporating a balanced breakfast into your routine supports healthy habits and helps set the tone for the day ahead. When breakfast becomes a fun, bright spot in your morning routine, getting out of bed is a little easier,' she says.
Try one of our vibrant EatingWell reader-favorite breakfasts that take just 20 minutes or less to prepare!
Rise and shine—it's outside time! Research reveals that light exposure plays an important role in helping to establish your body's natural sleep-wake cycle while also offering support for mood and mental health. Cording shares that even if it's only for a few minutes, daylight exposure can help establish and support a healthy circadian rhythm. 'Over time, this helps your body get into a good routine so you can get better sleep the night ahead. It can also help boost your energy and mood,' she says.
There's power in making time for a mindful moment in the morning. It may seem impossible, but when you set aside even a few minutes, it's worth it. A meta-analysis explored how mindfulness-based stress reduction interventions (think: yoga or meditation) affect sleep quality and mental health for patients with insomnia. Researchers found that when implemented as part of a routine program, incorporating these interventions supported mental health and improved sleep quality.
Some may opt for meditation, others find value in journaling—whatever time you have to catch a mindful breath, take it. Use these minutes as an opportunity to set your intentions for the day (sans electronics).
Still want to do more to improve your sleep? We've got you covered. Consider these tips from Jaeger and Cording to help support better rest tonight.
Keep the bedroom dark, cool and quiet. Research shows these are the three key pillars to supporting better sleep health. However, sometimes these may not be in our control, notes Cording. If this is the case, she encourages clients to use a fan to moderate temperature, a sleep mask to block light, and earplugs to quiet outside noise.
Focus on key sleep-health nutrients throughout the day. Vitamin D, omega-3 fatty acids and glycine may help you get better sleep at night. These nutrients play a role in sleep health, supporting better sleep quality. Foods like salmon are rich in many of these nutrients, but generally speaking, eating a variety-filled, Mediterranean-inspired diet can also help meet these nutrient goals.
Limit late-night munchies and drinks. Avoid large meals, alcohol and caffeine before bed. Ideally, you want to give yourself a few hours after eating before going to bed to allow yourself time to digest.
Take a warm bath or shower before bed. Cording recommends this as a means to allow your body to cool off before hitting the sheets. She shares, 'As the body works to cool itself in response to the warm water exposure, this causes a drop in core temperature, helping you drift off more quickly.'
Consider tracking your nutrition and sleep. Tracking your meals and sleep may help you identify patterns where you notice certain foods exacerbate sleep troubles, allowing you to modify your diet to get better rest.
Fighting the urge to sleep in—even when you're tired—can benefit your sleep hygiene for the long haul. Nutrition experts share that when we routinely press the snooze button, we're upsetting our natural circadian rhythm. This causes our sleep-wake cycle to become out of balance, requiring even more energy to get it back on track. Instead, enlist the help of science-proven strategies, like drinking a glass of water first thing in the morning and fitting in movement, which can help restore your morning energy levels.
Read Next: 4 Ways to Get a Better Night's Sleep, According to an Expert
Read the original article on EATINGWELL

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

IVF parents are spending thousands to predict their babies' chances of having Alzheimer's, cancer and heart disease
IVF parents are spending thousands to predict their babies' chances of having Alzheimer's, cancer and heart disease

New York Post

time18 minutes ago

  • New York Post

IVF parents are spending thousands to predict their babies' chances of having Alzheimer's, cancer and heart disease

Maybe she's born with it, maybe it's … genetic optimization? Prospective parents using in vitro fertilization (IVF) will soon be able to select embryos based on their potential risk for diseases — including illnesses that develop later in life — thanks to a groundbreaking $5,999 service announced this week by a US biotech company. 'Before there's a heartbeat, there's DNA,' Kian Sadeghi, founder and chief executive of Nucleus Genomics, said in a statement. 'One file containing DNA and genetic markers can tell you more about your baby's future than any other test a doctor could possibly run at this stage.' 4 Supporters say screening could prevent chronic illness, but critics warn it may fuel stigma and inequality. New Africa – What is IVF? The popular fertility treatment involves removing eggs from a woman's ovaries and fertilizing them with sperm in a lab. The resulting embryo — which could be frozen or fresh — is placed into the uterus, where it hopefully implants in the uterine wall and sparks a pregnancy. Before implantation, many IVF clinics already screen embryos for genetic abnormalities — such as extra chromosomes or gene mutations — that can lead to failed implantations, miscarriages, birth defects or inherited disorders. But the first-of-its-kind service from Nucleus Genomics takes things a step further. Build-a-baby The company just launched Nucleus Embryo, a new software platform that lets potential parents dig deep into the full genetic blueprint of their embryos before choosing which one to implant. 4 The number of Americans using IVF has skyrocketed over the last decade. – The tool lets IVF patients compare the DNA of up to 20 embryos, screening them for more than 900 conditions — including Alzheimer's, Type 2 diabetes, heart disease and several forms of cancer. It doesn't stop there. The program also flags potential mental health conditions like depression and schizophrenia and even ranks cognitive traits like IQ. Parents can also get a look at cosmetic and physical features, from height, baldness and BMI to eye and hair color. The company isn't promising perfection. Instead, the software generates a so-called polygenic risk score that will give parents the probability of how likely it is an embryo might develop certain traits or diseases. 4 Many IVF clinics already screen for certain genetic risk factors, like an abnormal number of chromosomes. Charlize Davids/ – Ultimately, it's up to the parents to decide which qualities matter most to them. For those looking to decode the results, genetic counseling sessions are available. 'Lifespan has dramatically increased in the last 150 years,' Sadeghi told the Wall Street Journal. 'DNA testing to predict and reduce chronic disease can make it happen again.' A new era of reproductive tech The practice, known as polygenic embryo screening, is already highly controversial in the medical world, according to a report published by Harvard Law School's Petrie-Flom Center. Critics warn that allowing parents to screen embryos for risks like depression or diabetes could deepen stigma and discrimination against people living with those conditions. Meanwhile, disability advocates argue it promotes the harmful idea that disability is something to be fixed, not a natural part of human diversity. And when it comes to choosing embryos for traits like intelligence or athleticism, critics say we're sliding into designer baby territory — a modern form of eugenics that favors the rich, reinforcing social and healthcare inequalities. 4 Few Americans approve of using the technology to predict traits unrelated to disease. Gemyful – Still, the public appears open to some aspects of the tech. A 2023 survey found that 77% of Americans support using it to screen embryos for the likelihood of developing certain physical conditions, while 72% back screening for mental health risks. Proponents argue it's no different from vaccination — a preventive tool, not a judgment on those with the condition. But when it comes to non-medical traits, support drops fast: only 36% back screening embryos for behavioral traits and just 30% for physical features like height or eye color.

Most Republicans Enrolled in Medicaid 'Worried' About Funding Cuts—Poll
Most Republicans Enrolled in Medicaid 'Worried' About Funding Cuts—Poll

Newsweek

time22 minutes ago

  • Newsweek

Most Republicans Enrolled in Medicaid 'Worried' About Funding Cuts—Poll

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. While Republicans in Congress have been pushing for major Medicaid cuts in the new budget, many Medicaid enrollees are worried about what this means for their health coverage — including those who identify as Republican. A new poll from KFF revealed that 76 percent of Republicans enrolled in Medicaid are worried about potential funding cuts. The survey also shows that 17 percent of Republicans identify as Medicaid enrollees. This didn't come as a surprise to experts who spoke with Newsweek. "Many of the heavily Republican-controlled states are often the highest per capita recipients of government assistance," Kevin Thompson, the CEO of 9i Capital Group and the host of the 9innings podcast, told Newsweek. Why It Matters Republican lawmakers have advanced sweeping changes to Medicaid as part of their budget reconciliation package, known as the "One Big Beautiful Bill Act." The bill, which passed the House in late May 2025, proposes to cut over $700 billion in federal Medicaid spending, threatening coverage for millions of Americans. The Congressional Budget Office estimated that more than 10 million people could lose Medicaid coverage if the proposal becomes law. Beds and medical equipment are seen inside the US Navy hospital ship USNS Comfort while docked at the Port of Miami, Biscayne Bay, Miami, Florida on June 3, 2025. Beds and medical equipment are seen inside the US Navy hospital ship USNS Comfort while docked at the Port of Miami, Biscayne Bay, Miami, Florida on June 3, 2025. CHANDAN KHANNA/AFP via Getty Images What To Know Potential Medicaid reductions under the new legislation target several key areas, including the federal match for Medicaid expansion, spending caps, new work requirements, and more frequent eligibility checks. While the GOP viewpoint has historically been pro-Medicaid reductions, cuts at this level could significantly impact the nearly 80 million Americans who rely on the program for health insurance, including a significant number of Republicans. In the new KFF report, 76 percent of Republicans enrolled in Medicaid said they were worried about potential funding cuts. Additionally, more than a quarter of Medicaid enrollees are Republican, including one in five who identify with MAGA. "As a government program, Medicaid provides benefits to millions of Americans in 'red' and 'blue' states," Alex Beene, a financial literacy instructor for the University of Tennessee at Martin, told Newsweek. "As such, it should come as no surprise a sizable number of Republicans either receive benefits from the program or know someone who does." The federal government currently pays 90 percent of Medicaid expansion costs, but proposed reductions would lower this rate, threatening financial stability for states that expanded Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act. Changes could also introduce per-capita caps or block grants, limit the use of provider taxes to finance Medicaid, and roll back simplified enrollment rules implemented under President Biden. Together, these measures could force states to limit enrollment, reduce benefits, or impose new costs on enrollees. Republican leaders have tied these reductions to broader budget goals, including $4.5 trillion in tax cuts championed by former President Donald Trump. "Many of the heavily Republican-controlled states are often the highest per capita recipients of government assistance," Thompson told Newsweek. "That's not meant to be disingenuous—it simply shows where the power lies: with the wealthy who control the districts and seats in those regions. The truth is, people often vote for their party and don't believe these policies will ever impact them personally—until they do." House Republicans identified more than $880 billion in savings from Medicaid, with much of the debate focused on whether Medicaid should continue to support able-bodied adults without dependents, or remain narrowly focused on children, seniors, and people with disabilities. The bill would also restrict Medicaid funding for certain health care providers, such as Planned Parenthood, and prohibit federal matching funds for gender-affirming care for minors. Nationally, 54 percent of U.S. adults are worried that reductions in federal Medicaid spending would negatively impact their own or their family's ability to get and pay for health care, the KFF report found. "It's a wake-up call for anyone who thinks Medicaid is just a Democratic issue," Michael Ryan, a finance expert and the founder of told Newsweek. "Medicaid isn't red or blue. It's the safety net stretched under millions of American families, including a significant slice of the GOP base." What People Are Saying Alex Beene, a financial literacy instructor for the University of Tennessee at Martin, told Newsweek: "Over the last three election cycles, the Republican base has expanded far past the days of simply promoting tax cuts and has a large number of supporters who rely on programs like Medicaid for essential services. And while cuts to the program could occur, we've already seen blowback to any proposed reductions. That's more than likely because some Republican members of Congress know cuts could dramatically affect their reelection chances." Michael Ryan, a finance expert and the founder of told Newsweek: "There's a real disconnect between the political talking points and reality. Many Republican voters may not realize just how much their communities (especially rural ones) depend on Medicaid to keep hospitals open and doctors in town. The myth that Medicaid is for 'someone else' is crumbling fast." Kevin Thompson, the CEO of 9i Capital Group and the host of the 9innings podcast, told Newsweek: "There will be a significant number of people kicked off the Medicaid program—either because they didn't submit their work requirements on time, were removed due to the rollback of Medicaid expansion, or simply no longer qualify." What Happens Next Ryan said if the cuts are enacted, rural hospitals will close, and working-class families will lose their health coverage. "The fallout will land squarely in the heart of Republican country," Ryan said. "You can't gut the safety net and expect your own voters to walk away unscathed." "Medicaid cuts are political dynamite. History shows voters punish politicians who take away health coverage. Just ask Missouri and Tennessee. If Republicans push too hard, they risk alienating their own base."

Long-lasting HIV prevention shot heads toward approval
Long-lasting HIV prevention shot heads toward approval

UPI

time37 minutes ago

  • UPI

Long-lasting HIV prevention shot heads toward approval

June 6 (UPI) -- A new vaccine to prevent HIV is expected to be approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration later this month. If approved, the shot -- lenacapavir -- would be given twice a year and could be a big step forward in the fight against HIV. Drugmaker Gilead Sciences tested the shot in a study of women and girls. None of the participants who received the injections got HIV. That early success helped boost Gilead's stock by 73% over the past year, The Wall Street Journal reported. "We know it's challenging to take a daily pill for prevention, and we see an incredible opportunity here," said Johanna Mercier, Gilead's chief commercial officer Right now, more than 400,000 people in the United States use pills to prevent HIV, The Wall Street Journal added. These medications are referred to as PrEP, short for pre-exposure prophylaxis. Gilead expects the number of users to top 1 million by the next decade. Many people already say they'd prefer a shot over daily pills. In one survey of more than 500 PrEP users, 95% said they would switch to a long-acting injection. Sales of other long-acting options, like the shot Apretude from GSK, have risen sharply - up 63% in the past year. Even with strong results, Gilead faces several hurdles. One is reaching the people who need PrEP the most. Black Americans represent 39% of new HIV cases but only 14% of current PrEP users. Many people still face stigma or lack insurance coverage, which can limit access. Gilead says reaching underserved groups is a top goal. Most current PrEP users have commercial insurance, but Medicaid will be key for expanding access to lower-income communities. Another concern: Some experts worry the new shot may simply replace current Gilead products, like the daily pill Descovy, which now holds about 40% to 45% of the market. But Gilead says the shot should help expand the overall number of people using PrEP in both the U.S. and abroad. "We're thinking globally about the public health impact we can have," Mercier said. The company is working with governments and health groups in the United Kingdom and low-income countries to raise awareness and make these products more available. More information The National Institutes of Health has more on Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP). Copyright © 2025 HealthDay. All rights reserved.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store