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🌙Understand Sleep Cycles

Decode the 90-minute rhythm running your nights so you can sketch a bedtime window aimed at a specific alarm time — and stop waking up groggy for reasons you can't name.

Foundations14 drops~2-week path · 5–8 min/daypersonal development

Phase 1What A Sleep Cycle Actually Is

Meet the four stages inside one 90-minute cycle

4 drops
  1. Sleep isn't one thing — it's four, in a loop

    6 min

    A night of sleep isn't a single state. It's four distinct stages — N1, N2, N3, and REM — that your brain cycles through roughly every 90 minutes, all night long.

  2. Your night is four songs on repeat, not one long track

    6 min

    A single sleep cycle lasts about 90 minutes and contains all four stages. You don't get one block of deep sleep and one block of REM — you get several, spaced roughly 90 minutes apart.

  3. N3 is where the body does its maintenance

    6 min

    Deep sleep — stage N3 — is when your body does the heaviest physical restoration: tissue repair, immune work, and memory consolidation. It dominates the first half of the night.

  4. REM is the opposite shape of deep sleep

    6 min

    REM sleep — the dreaming stage — starts short and grows with each cycle. Your longest, most vivid REM period is right before you wake.

Phase 2Mapping Your Eight-Hour Night

Map an 8-hour night into deep and REM zones

5 drops
  1. Eight hours is five cycles with change left over

    6 min

    A typical 8-hour night contains five full 90-minute cycles with 30 minutes of spare time for sleep onset and wake transitions. Thinking in cycles, not hours, changes what 'enough sleep' means.

  2. Your deep-sleep zone ends before midnight on most schedules

    6 min

    If you fall asleep at 11pm, the bulk of your deep sleep finishes by roughly 1:30am. After that, the night becomes progressively REM-heavier.

  3. The last 90 minutes are nearly pure REM

    6 min

    Your final sleep cycle can be up to 45 minutes of REM — nearly half its length. That's why cutting morning sleep has such an outsized cost on dreams, mood, and memory.

  4. Your night has a shape — and now you can draw it

    6 min

    A typical 8-hour night looks like a waveform: high peaks of deep sleep early, high peaks of REM late, light sleep bridging them. That waveform is the whole story.

  5. Where your alarm lands decides how you wake

    6 min

    An alarm that fires during N3 deep sleep feels brutal. An alarm that fires during light N2 or the end of REM feels natural. Cycle math is mostly about controlling where the alarm lands.

Phase 3Why Cycles Explain How You Feel

Tie cycle timing to grogginess, dreams, and alarms

4 drops
  1. Sleep inertia explains the 'why am I like this' mornings

    7 min

    That foggy, leaden feeling in the first 20 minutes after a hard wake-up has a name — sleep inertia — and a cause: your alarm pulled you out of N3 deep sleep.

  2. Remembering a vivid dream is a clue about when you woke

    7 min

    You only remember dreams when you wake during or just after REM. A morning full of vivid recall almost always means your alarm fired near the end of a REM-heavy cycle.

  3. The hidden cost of the snooze button

    7 min

    Hitting snooze doesn't give you bonus sleep — it drops you back into a fresh cycle onset that your alarm is about to rip you out of nine minutes later, exactly when early N2 would hit hardest.

  4. Naps work when they match cycle structure

    7 min

    A 20-minute nap works because you never enter N3. A 90-minute nap works because you complete one full cycle. A 45-minute nap is usually the worst of both worlds — you wake mid-N3 with inertia.

Phase 4Designing Your Bedtime Window

Design a bedtime window built backward from wake time

1 drop
  1. Build your personal bedtime-from-alarm plan

    8 min

    Build your personal bedtime-from-alarm plan

Frequently asked questions

How long is one sleep cycle?
This is covered in the “Understand Sleep Cycles” learning path. Start with daily 5-minute micro-lessons that build from fundamentals to hands-on application.
What are the four stages of sleep?
This is covered in the “Understand Sleep Cycles” learning path. Start with daily 5-minute micro-lessons that build from fundamentals to hands-on application.
Why do I feel groggy even after eight hours of sleep?
This is covered in the “Understand Sleep Cycles” learning path. Start with daily 5-minute micro-lessons that build from fundamentals to hands-on application.
When does REM sleep happen during the night?
This is covered in the “Understand Sleep Cycles” learning path. Start with daily 5-minute micro-lessons that build from fundamentals to hands-on application.
How do I calculate the best bedtime for a 6:30 alarm?
This is covered in the “Understand Sleep Cycles” learning path. Start with daily 5-minute micro-lessons that build from fundamentals to hands-on application.