Peaceful bedroom

I Tried Sleeping 8 Hours Every Night for 30 Days – Here Is What Broke Me

Spoiler: I did not succeed. I averaged 6 hours 47 minutes. Here is what that failure taught me about recovery, perfectionism, and why the “8 hours” dogma is hurting you.

Why I Did This

My Oura ring kept telling me my sleep score was “poor.” The wellness internet told me I needed 8 hours. I am a single mom with two kids, a disrupted cortisol system, and a brain that refuses to shut off before midnight. But I tried anyway, because that is what good biohackers do, right?

Week 1: The Painful Reality

I went to bed at 10 PM every night. I woke up at 3:17 AM like clockwork. My cortisol spike was so predictable I could set an alarm by it. The sleep hygiene changes (no phone, dark room, cool temperature) helped marginally — 18 minutes more sleep per night.

Week 2: The Trade-Off

Getting more sleep meant sacrificing my only quiet hours. The 9-11 PM slot was when I wrote, researched, and had silence. Giving that up for an extra 45 minutes of broken sleep did not improve my recovery — it just made me resentful.

Week 3: The Reframe

I stopped aiming for 8 hours and started aiming for quality. I focused on my cortisol curve: protecting the first three hours of sleep (deep sleep) rather than extending total time. I stopped checking my sleep score in the morning.

What Actually Worked

  • Evening protein: a small chicken breast or cottage cheese before bed reduced my 3 AM wake-up
  • Lowered room temperature to 18 C (64 F): this added 22 minutes of deep sleep
  • Stopped sleep tracking: disabling Oura sleep tracking removed the anxiety

The Honest Conclusion

8 hours is not the goal for everyone. For people with dysregulated cortisol, chronic pain, or parenting responsibilities — the number is less important than the curve. If you are waking up feeling better than yesterday, you are winning.

I still aim for 7 hours. I hit 6:30 most nights. And I am healthier than when I was obsessing over 8.

Chloe Wong

Chloe Wong is a recovery researcher and writer who spent years navigating chronic health challenges without health insurance. She shares practical, evidence-based recovery strategies for people who are broke, exhausted, and done with toxic wellness culture.

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