Cut out the light
Early-dawn light is likely to wake you, so it’s worth investing in black-out blinds or curtain linings. “As you reach the early hours of the morning your drive for sleep is already quite low as you have partially sated your need,” explains Dr Allie Hare, consultant in sleep medicine and president of the British Sleep Society. “You’re more easily aroused by light and it’s more difficult to re-establish sleep.”
At the other end of the day, it’s much harder to drop off because longer, lighter evenings delay the release of sleep-inducing melatonin from the pineal gland, shifting our natural body clock. Try doing outdoor activities, such as gardening or exercise, earlier in the day, and draw the curtains early when you’re at home, because melatonin production works on cues from the eyes. Dr Gotts suggests giving your brain a psychological prompt to switch off by dimming the lights and perhaps lighting a candle.