Circadian Rhythm Optimization

How do you optimize your circadian rhythm for better sleep and energy?

Your circadian clock is set mainly by the timing of light, with meals, activity, and temperature as secondary cues. Getting bright light early, dimming it at night, eating and moving on a stable schedule, and respecting your chronotype keep the clock aligned with your day — improving sleep, alertness, and energy. The light effects are strongly supported; some meal-timing and chronotype claims are promising but less settled.

Almost everything about when you sleep, feel alert, and crash is governed by a ~24-hour internal clock that takes its cues from your environment. This hub covers the highest-leverage ways to set that clock: morning light, consistent meal timing, evening light reduction, and working with your chronotype rather than against it. Each practice explains the mechanism and grades the evidence, and treats circadian alignment as a daily habit, not a medical fix.

Practices

Get bright light early

Anchor your clock with bright (ideally outdoor) light soon after waking.

Eat on a consistent schedule

Keep meals — especially their timing window — roughly stable day to day.

Dim light in the evening

Lower light intensity in the last hours before bed so the clock can wind down.

Work with your chronotype

Align demanding tasks and your schedule with whether you run early or late.

Anchor a stable wake time

Pick one wake time and hold it, even on weekends, as the clock’s anchor.

Use daytime movement as a cue

Time physical activity to reinforce a strong day signal and a calmer night.

Practice this with IX Coach

Reading about a practice changes nothing on its own. IX Coach turns these into a guided, adaptive routine — discerning where you are in real time and walking the practice with you, session after session.

Practice this with IX Coach

IX Coach: 7 days free, then $40/month (about $1.30/day).