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Sleep hygiene is one of those phrases that gets thrown around so much it’s almost lost its meaning. Ask most people what it involves and they’ll say something like “put your phone down before bed” and “keep a consistent schedule.” That’s not wrong — but it’s incomplete, and for adults over 40, it misses some of the most important pieces.
I’ve spent a lot of time figuring out what actually moves the needle on sleep quality at midlife. Some of the advice you’ll find everywhere works fine. Some of it works a lot better when you understand why. And some common recommendations are actually less relevant once you understand how sleep architecture changes after 40.
What I want to give you in this post is something more specific than a generic sleep tips list — a practical evening framework built around how your body actually works after 40, with the reasoning behind each piece so you can adapt it to your own life.
Before getting into the routine itself, it’s worth understanding a few things that shift with age, because they directly inform which habits matter most.
Slow-wave (deep) sleep declines. This is the most physically restorative stage of sleep — the stage where your body does the bulk of its tissue repair, immune maintenance, and memory consolidation. Adults over 40 spend progressively less time in slow-wave sleep and more time in lighter stages. This is largely why you can sleep the same number of hours and wake up feeling less rested than you did at 30.
Circadian rhythms shift earlier. Most adults over 40 experience a natural phase advance — meaning the internal clock drifts earlier. You feel sleepy earlier in the evening and your body wants to wake earlier in the morning. Fighting this by staying up late and sleeping in tends to backfire, producing a kind of chronic mild jet lag.
Cortisol patterns change. Cortisol — your primary stress and alertness hormone — is supposed to be low in the evening and rise in the early morning to help you wake up. With age (and chronic stress), this curve flattens: cortisol doesn’t drop as cleanly in the evening, which can make it harder to fall asleep and easier to wake at 3–4 a.m.
Melatonin production decreases. The pineal gland produces less melatonin with age, and its release becomes less robust. This is part of why the transition into sleep can feel less smooth after 40 — the internal signal to sleep isn’t as strong.
Understanding these four shifts is actually clarifying, because it tells you exactly what a good sleep hygiene routine needs to do: protect and reinforce deep sleep, support your natural circadian rhythm rather than fight it, manage evening cortisol, and give your melatonin system a hand.
I want to be clear upfront: this isn’t a rigid protocol you have to follow exactly. It’s a framework built around the biology above, and I’ll explain the reasoning behind each piece so you can make it your own.
About 3 hours before bed: Finish eating
Eating a large meal close to bedtime elevates your core body temperature and keeps your digestive system active — both of which interfere with the drop in core temperature that signals your body to initiate sleep. A 3-hour buffer isn’t always realistic, but getting to 2 hours makes a real difference.
If you need something after dinner, a small protein-containing snack is fine. A bowl of cereal or a sugary snack, on the other hand, will spike blood sugar and trigger an insulin response that can wake you in the middle of the night when blood sugar drops.
About 2 hours before bed: Dim the lights and limit screens
Light is the primary signal your brain uses to regulate melatonin production. Bright overhead lights and the blue-spectrum light from screens tell your brain it’s still daytime, suppressing melatonin at exactly the time you want it rising.
Two hours before bed, I switch to lamps and warmer light sources and start winding down screen use. I’m not religious about this — life happens — but on nights when I stick to it, the difference in how easily I fall asleep is noticeable.
If you use your phone or watch TV in the evening, blue light blocking glasses are a reasonable middle ground. They’re not as effective as eliminating screens, but they help.
60–90 minutes before bed: Take magnesium glycinate
This is one of the highest-impact additions I’ve made to my sleep routine. Magnesium glycinate — magnesium bound to the amino acid glycine — supports GABA receptor activity in the brain (which quiets mental chatter), helps regulate cortisol, and aids melatonin production. Glycine itself has been shown to lower core body temperature, which is one of the signals your body uses to transition into sleep.
I take 200 mg of elemental magnesium in glycinate form with my dinner or right after. The effects are subtle — not sedating, just a gradual easing of the “wired but tired” feeling that used to keep me awake. I’ve written a detailed post on magnesium glycinate for sleep if you want the full breakdown of how it works and which products I trust.
60 minutes before bed: Lower the temperature
Core body temperature needs to drop by about 1–2 degrees Fahrenheit to initiate and maintain sleep. This is one of the most underrated levers in sleep quality and one of the easiest to act on.
The optimal bedroom temperature for sleep is generally cited as 65–68°F (18–20°C). If you run warm (which becomes more common in midlife, particularly for women in perimenopause), erring toward the cooler end of that range is worth trying. I keep my bedroom noticeably cooler than the rest of the house and it’s made a consistent difference.
A warm shower or bath 60–90 minutes before bed is a counterintuitive but well-researched trick: the post-bath drop in skin temperature actually accelerates the core temperature decline that promotes sleep onset.
30–60 minutes before bed: Wind-down activity
Your nervous system needs a transition period — a signal that the active part of the day is over. What works varies by person, but the common thread is low stimulation and low demand.
For me this is reading (a physical book or e-ink reader like a Kindle Paperwhite, not a tablet), light stretching, or journaling. I’ve found that writing down anything on my mental to-do list — not to process it, just to capture it — reduces the middle-of-the-night brain churn that used to wake me up.
What doesn’t work as wind-down: anything that activates problem-solving, emotional response, or time pressure. News, social media, work email, and even certain TV shows can keep cortisol elevated past when you’re trying to wind down.
15–30 minutes before bed: L-theanine (optional but effective)
L-theanine is an amino acid found in green tea that promotes relaxed alertness without sedation. It works by increasing alpha brain wave activity — the kind associated with calm, focused states — and by modulating GABA and glutamate, the brain’s primary inhibitory and excitatory neurotransmitters.
I take 200 mg of L-theanine about 20–30 minutes before bed on nights when my mind is particularly active. It doesn’t knock me out — it just takes the edge off mental chatter. It combines well with magnesium glycinate. I’ve covered L-theanine in more depth in its own post if you want to understand the mechanism better before trying it.
Bedtime: Consistent timing
This is the one piece of sleep advice that’s genuinely non-negotiable and genuinely hard. Your circadian rhythm is governed by consistency — it’s essentially a biological clock that needs to be set and re-set by regular light exposure and sleep timing.
Going to bed and waking up at the same time every day — including weekends — is the single most powerful thing you can do for sleep quality over time. The weekend sleep-in feels restorative in the moment but shifts your circadian phase later, which is why Monday mornings feel like jet lag.
I aim for a 30-minute window: in bed by 10:00–10:30 p.m., up by 6:00–6:30 a.m. The specific times matter less than the consistency.
A few things that get a lot of attention in sleep hygiene discussions but that I’d put in the “nice to have, not essential” category:
Sleep hygiene is the foundation — but it’s not a cure for everything. If you’ve been consistently following a solid routine for several weeks and still waking multiple times a night, lying awake for extended periods, or feeling unrefreshed regardless of hours slept, there are a few other things worth looking at:
For a broader look at what I’ve found helpful for sleep at midlife — including supplements, lifestyle factors, and specific strategies for the most common sleep problems — my complete guide to natural sleep solutions is a good starting point.
If the full routine feels like too much to implement at once, start with just three changes and build from there:
Those three habits alone address the circadian, light, and nutritional pieces that matter most for most people over 40. Once they’re automatic, layer in the rest.
Sleep quality is one of those things that compounds — consistently good sleep makes everything else easier, and consistently poor sleep makes everything else harder. The investment in getting this right is worth it.
— Blair
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