Listen… I checked my sleep data for the week, and honestly?
My circadian rhythm is fighting for its life.
As someone who runs, lifts, trains for HYROX, parents, studies accounting, and still tries to pretend she’s thriving… I knew I was tired.
But the numbers said: “Girl. Sit down.”
So let’s talk about what my sleep schedule actually says about me this week and how you can learn from it before your body files an HR complaint.


My Body Wants Routine… I’m Just Disrespectful
My average bedtime: 11:23 PM
My average wake time: 5:30 AM
This means my body is TRYING to be consistent.
Like, she’s there. She’s ready.
She’s clocking in for the night shift.
But am I giving her enough hours to recover from CrossFit, running, mom duties, and life?
Absolutely not.
It’s giving:
“I love discipline but also love chaos.”

The Sleep Hours Are Embarrassing
If sleep was a relationship, I’d be the toxic one.
For someone who asks a LOT from their body: strength, endurance, patience with children who yell at Fortnite this is not enough.
Saturday Ruined Everything
Let’s be honest.
One night of 3.5 hours of sleep will absolutely:
- spike stress hormones
- crush recovery
- make you crave sugar
- ruin your mood
- make your training feel heavy
- and have you fighting invisible enemies all day
That one night dragged my weekly score down like a toxic ex.
But My Wake Time Is Loyal
Despite all the chaos, my circadian rhythm said:
“I don’t care what time you went to sleep. We wake up at 5:30.”
This type of commitment… I wish my kids had when it’s time to get ready.
A consistent wake time is actually amazing for your internal clock.
It stabilizes hormones, energy, hunger cues all of it.
But the problem?
I’m waking up consistently tired.

My Sleep Score Knows I’m Struggling
Anytime I gave my body 7+ hours, my sleep score jumped into the 70s and 80s.
Anytime I acted dumb?
Score dropped into the 40s.
My watch said:
“You want to be a high-performance athlete AND a full-time student?
Okay, but you need to SLEEP first, ma’am.”
So What Does This All Mean?
My circadian rhythm is actually solid.
It knows what it wants.
But my sleep habits do NOT match my lifestyle.
I’m asking my body to run a marathon on iPhone battery level 5%.
Between training, kids, school, and running a whole gym community…
I need 7–8 hours. Minimum.
Right now, I’m averaging about 5.7.
My rhythm is steady…
but severely under-supported.
Same, girl. Same.
Practical Tips to Actually Improve Your Sleep (Not Just Manifest It)
Here are the things that ACTUALLY help — backed by science AND tested by “I wake up at 5:30 whether I like it or not” energy:
1. Set a Realistic Bedtime
Aim for 10:30 PM if you wake up at 5:30.
Yes, I know. Yes, I’m also fighting for my life about it.
2. Create a “Shut Down” Routine
Your body needs signals that sleep is coming:
- turn off bright lights
- stop scrolling
- stretch for 2 minutes
- drink water
- wipe your counters like a dramatic Latina mom
3. Limit late caffeine
A 5 PM cold brew?
She’s cute but she’s treating you wrong.
4. Reduce hyper-stimulation at night
That includes:
- stress-cleaning
- intense workouts
- rapid-fire texting
- TikTok rabbit holes about “9 things ruining your life”
5. Keep your wake time consistent
THIS is your superpower.
You’re already nailing the hardest part.
6. Support recovery around your training
If you’re running, lifting, and parenting —
You need sleep the way your car needs gas.
No gas = no go.
Conclusion: Your Body Is Doing Its Best — Help Her Out
Your circadian rhythm isn’t the problem.
Your schedule isn’t the problem.
Even your early wake-up time isn’t the problem.
The real issue is that you’re doing high-performance things on low-performance sleep.
If you want:
- better runs
- better lifts
- better mood
- better recovery
- better discipline
…you need more sleep than what you’re currently giving yourself.
Your goals deserve a rested version of you, not the exhausted, “don’t talk to me” gremlin version.








































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