--- Title: No More Alarms Subtitle: Leaning into my bodyâs natural rhythms. Tags: [productivity, burnout, rest, mental health] Category: Blog Date: 2019-09-10 07:15 Summary: > I may never regularly set an alarm again. Instead, Iâm leaning into my bodyâs natural rhythms. --- [Assumed Audience][aa]: pretty much everybody. Everybody sleeps. [aa]: https://v4.chriskrycho.com/2018/assumed-audiences.html I may never regularly set an alarm again. Last year, in the midst of getting increasingly [burned out][burnout], I hit a point where I *couldnât* set an alarm. I found myself needing 8½â9½ hours of sleep every night, and even in that range, setting an alarm often left me feeling exhausted for the rest of the day. As I have slowly but steadily [recovered], I started setting an alarm again at times. But, at least for now, Iâm done with that. [burnout]: https://v4.chriskrycho.com/burnout [recovered]: https://v4.chriskrycho.com/2018/stewarding-my-reserves.html First, over the past few weeks, I found myself fighting the alarm. No matter when I set it, inevitably Iâd end up awakened out of a deep sleep. I would spend the first chunk of my day struggling to be really alert and awake. This is, in a word, frustrating. Second, I have long observed that even when I donât set an alarm, I usually only sleep about 7â7½ hours. If I sleep longer, itâs usually because I *need* more sleepâwhether because Iâm recovering from a [particularly long, hard run][race], or because Iâm fighting a cold, or because Iâve been traveling, or simply because other things in life can leave me tired! [race]: https://www.strava.com/activities/2687727432/overview The two things came together for me last week, in the (obvious?) realization that I donât *have* to set an alarm, and in fact I probably *shouldnât*. My body has healthy rhythms. I can and generally should trust those rhythms. I can make adjustments over time by going to bed earlier or later, and by changing what and when I eat and drink, and how and when I exercise. But, given my bodyâs existing healthy rhythms, if I naturally end up sleeping 8¼ hours instead of 7½⦠that probably means I needed it! I will still use an alarm judiciously: to make sure I get up on time when traveling, for example. (Even there, I tend to wake up on my own before the alarm goes off. Still, better to be safe than sorry: airline tickets are expensive!) What I am not going to do for the foreseeable future is use an alarm regularly. A lot of the productivity advice out there insists that you *must* set an alarm if you want to get things done in life. I can attest that it *can* be helpful, and I leaned hard on setting an alarm and getting up when it went off throughout my time in seminary. But I also suspect that pushing myself[^body] that way for so many years was a significant contributor to my burning out. At this point, I will probably get a *little* bit less done on a day-to-day basis than I did at times in the past. Certainly I am not able to *commit* to [writing every morning] as I did for a while. That tradeoff is fine with me, though. My health matters. If I want to continue working effectively and well at *all* the areas of my life throughout my long life, I need to steward my strength. [writing every morning]: https://v4.chriskrycho.com/2018/the-value-of-a-good-habit.html Some people struggle with laziness. This isnât advice for them; the right medicine there is the book of Proverbsâ admonitions against lying abed all day! For those of us who are inclined to push too hard, though, turning off the alarm may be an important part of remembering our finitude. Learning to live with our limitations teaches us us trust God with the things we cannot do and helps us be more faithful and effective in the things we *should* be doing. So, while I may revisit this question at some pointâ¦Â no more alarms for me. [^body]: I initially wrote âmy bodyâ but changed it because my *body* and my *self* are one and the same, even if my body is not the *whole* of my self.