Sleep onset insomnia and sleep maintenance insomnia have different causes and solutions. Here's what you need to know.
When people can’t fall asleep, they usually try harder. They relax more aggressively. They optimize routines. They stack supplements. Sleep science tells a different story. Sleep onset improves not by force, but by reducing the conditions that keep the brain alert. This post synthesizes what research actually supports and what consistently fails.
Most sleep advice sounds reasonable. Much of it fails anyway. That’s not because people are undisciplined. It’s because most advice misunderstands how sleep onset actually works.
Sleep wearables are good at telling you how long you slept. They are much worse at telling you when sleep actually began. That gap matters, because sleep onset is where many sleep problems start.
Sleep onset is the transition from wakefulness to sleep. It is not a moment. It is a process. Most people think falling asleep happens when your eyes close or when you stop thinking. In reality, sleep onset is a measurable neurophysiological shift involving the brain, nervous system, and body moving from an alert state into early sleep. Understanding sleep onset matters because many sleep problems do not happen during sleep. They happen before sleep begins.