Beat the 2 PM Slump by Aligning With Your Body Clock

The article explains that the familiar afternoon energy dip is tied to our circadian clock, with a natural slump between 1 and 4 p.m., and offers practical steps to combat it: start the day with bright light (and use 10,000-lux lamps in darker months), keep a consistent bedtime to avoid social jet lag, consider shifting to an earlier wake time if possible, use short 30-minute naps if needed, incorporate light exercise, avoid high-carb lunches and front-load calories with a big breakfast followed by a lighter, high-protein lunch, limit blue-light at night and practice good sleep hygiene, and consider nightly magnesium to improve sleep. The overarching goal is to anchor your day to your circadian rhythm to improve alertness and performance.
- Why Am I So Tired All the Time? GQ
- You don’t have to be tired: Fatigue is treatable Sanford Health News
- We Asked a Doctor What to Do If You’re Still Tired After 8 Hours of Sleep Verywell Health
- I Keep Waking Up Groggy And Fatigued. Turns Out It's Probably Because I'm Making These Mistakes HuffPost UK
- When your morning fatigue is a medical warning sign The Indian Express
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