Skip to content

30 Day Challenge Series, Day 4: Create a Simple Wind-Down Cue Before Bed

In this conversation, Cheryl McColgan discusses the significance of establishing a wind down routine before bed to enhance sleep quality. She emphasizes the importance of calming activities, such as reading, warm baths, and reducing screen time, to prepare the body and mind for sleep. Cheryl also touches on the use of sleep supplements and tools to improve sleep, highlighting the critical role of good sleep in overall health and wellness.

Takeaways

Create a simple wind down cue before bed.
Calm your brain and nervous system for better sleep.
Screen time at night is a poor habit for sleep.
Reading before bed can help you relax.
Warm baths signal your body to calm down.
Turning off bright lights aids in winding down.
Sleep is critical for health and longevity.
Good sleep supports weight loss and fat loss.
Consider a warm drink as part of your bedtime routine.
Engage with others about effective wind down routines.

Disclaimer: Links may contain affiliate links, which means we may get paid a commission at no additional cost to you if you purchase through this page. Read our full disclosure here.

CONNECT WITH CHERYL

Shop all my healthy lifestyle favorites, lots of discounts

21 Day Fat Loss Kickstart: Make Keto Easy, Take Diet Breaks and Still Lose Weight 

Avaline Wines, Tested and Clean, Sugar Free

Drinking Ketones

Wild Pastures, Clean Meat to Your Doorstep 20% off for life 

Clean Beauty 20% off first order

DIY Lashes 10% off 

NIRA at Home Laser for Wrinkles 10% off or current promo with code HealNourishGrow

Instagram for daily stories with recipes, what I eat in a day and what's going on in life

Facebook

YouTube 

Pinterest

TikTok

Amazon Store

The Shoe Fairy Competition Gear

Getting Started with Keto Resources

The Complete Beginners Guide to Keto

Getting Started with Keto Podcast Episode

Getting Started with Keto Resource Guide

Episode Transcript

Cheryl McColgan (00:00.078)
Hey everyone, I'm Cheryl McColgan, founder of HealNurshGrow and welcome to day four of your healthy habits challenge. Today's habit is very simple, but it's so powerful and it has to do with one of the things that I think is one of the most underappreciated aspects of health and that is sleep. And so the habit that we're going to do today is to create a simple wind down cue before bed.

So what this does is basically gets you ready for sleep, starts to calm your brain, starts to calm your nervous system so that you can actually get in bed and go to sleep instead of getting in bed and staying wired for multiple minutes or even hours after that. Definitely something we want to avoid. So having this consistent wind down cue is exactly what it does. Cues your brain and your body to be ready for sleep and to start to calm down.

There's any number of things that this could possibly be for you. One of the things that you will have heard from many people in the past, and this is so true, is that screen time at night is really a poor habit to have to get good sleep. So maybe your wind down cue is putting your phone in the other room and putting it on the charger before you get ready for bed.

That's a great way to do that. It also cuts down on the blue light. So that will allow your body to produce melatonin, which gives you better sleep. But this cue is something you want to do consistently every day, just so that it gives again, your brain and your body that idea that it's time to calm down. Another thing that people really like doing for this type of cue is to simply do some reading before bed.

And so again, not reading on a device like your computer or your phone, but maybe an old school book. I know that sounds crazy or the the Kindles now have, they don't have any blue light coming off of them. And just reading is just very calming in the evening. It'll put you right to sleep. Even books that you're in love with and excited about. Sometimes it's like, it just starts to get you very drowsy and you want to ideally do it in bed. as soon as you really start to get sleepy, you just put the book aside and go to sleep.

Cheryl McColgan (02:16.782)
Another one that's great for bedtime is a warm bath. The whole reason that this works is warming up your body. And ideally you want to do it maybe an hour to an hour and a half before bed. But again, it's a relaxing activity. It's something that signals it's time to calm down and get ready for sleep. But it also has a physiological response in the body where you warm up your body temperature a little bit. Then when you get out and it starts to come back down,

your body temperature coming back down actually makes you sleepy. So that's another good one. But really any of these, can be anything that works for you. You just want it to be something that you can do on a consistent basis and that actually helps calm your nervous system. So it could also be, you know, a breathing exercise or some light stretching or, you know, anything like that, that's going to make going to bed easier for your body. Another one is,

Turning off bright lights. So maybe your cue for your wind down is to go around your house and turn off all the lights and maybe you just have like a gentle Red light in the room or just dim lights in your room as you're winding down But just doing those cues time after time eventually it gets your body to a place where It's calm enough and it's ready some other things that I use for sleep since we're talking about sleep sometimes just a wind down cue is not enough for some people but

Again, I think if you practice it on a consistent basis, that's going to change over time where it really does help you get to sleep. But there's other things. There's supplements you can take. mentioned melatonin. I actually wouldn't recommend taking that on a regular basis because it does tend to make you feel groggy in the morning. In addition to that, it can also affect your own melatonin production over time. So that's kind of not as recommended. But there's plenty of sleep supplements. Sorry, I was losing my word there. Sleep supplements out there.

that I've tried, I've used a brand called Dream. I had a new one sent to me that was from, the company's escaping me. It's kind of a funny name, but I'll link it in the show notes. So also that could be part of your ritual is if it's both of these drinks are kind of like a hot cocoa that you drink at night that has magnesium, GABA, some other sleep inducing things in it. So that could be your ritual is to make your nice warm drink, go get in your bed, sit that, relax, and then.

Cheryl McColgan (04:38.434)
go to sleep. So that's one of the tools that I tend to use a lot. And then I've also talked a lot about in the past that I use a bed cooling pad. So I'm menopausal age, unfortunately. And a few years ago, I started getting horrible night sweats where it just really interrupted my sleep. So I started using a cooling pad on my bed about five years ago. And now it is so hard for me to sleep without it because it actually not only cools you but warms you as well.

and can use it to like gently warm the bed as your, almost as your alarm clock. Instead of using a harsh alarm, it just starts to warm up your body and wake you up very naturally. So depending on where you are with sleep, this wind down cue is a great start. And that's all we're looking for in this challenge, right? Just trying some new little habit snacks that you can see if it works for you or you can see if it would do you good to add it on in the future.

But this is just the beginning. So sleep is such, like I said, such a critical and underappreciated thing for health, longevity, for weight loss even, helps with fat loss. I mean, there's so many reasons why you want to get good sleep, but this is just a small way that you can get started. Start repeating this if it speaks to you. If you're someone that has trouble with sleep, I highly recommend that you take this one on and keep it for the rest of the challenge and beyond, because it will only help you.

It may not be enough, like I said, but it is great stars. So some of those things that I mentioned, I'll make sure I link them in the show notes. But for now, just create your simple wind down cue before bed. Try it out, see how you sleep and let me know in the comments if this works for you. If you already have a wind down routine, I'd love to hear about it because I think everybody wants to hear some good ideas if they can't think of anything that works for them or speaks to them. So definitely let me know if you have any tips and we can share them with everybody else in the comments. OK.

See you again tomorrow.

Author

  • Cheryl McColgan

    Cheryl McColgan is the Founder and Editor in Chief of Heal Nourish Grow, where she has published evidence-based health and nutrition content since 2018.

    With over 30 years of experience in fitness, nutrition, and healthy living, and nearly 20 years of professional editorial and journalism experience, she brings both subject-matter depth and trained editorial judgment to everything on the site.

    Cheryl holds a degree in Psychology with a minor in Addictions Studies, completed graduate training in Clinical Psychology, and is a NASM Certified Personal Trainer and E-RYT Certified Yoga Instructor and trained in Yoga Therapy.

    She is the author of 21 Day Fat Loss Kickstart, Make Keto Easy, Take Diet Breaks and Still Lose Weight, The Grain Free Cookbook for Beginners, and Easy Weeknight Keto.

    Read more about Cheryl and the journey that created Heal Nourish Grow on the about page.

    Cheryl McColgan is the founder of Heal Nourish Grow, where she writes about protein, body composition, healthy aging, and evidence-based nutrition and wellness along with the everyday habits that actually make those things work in real life.

    With a background in psychology and graduate training in clinical psychology, plus nearly 20 years of experience in editorial and publishing, Cheryl approaches health from both a research and real-world perspective. She’s also been immersed in fitness and nutrition for more than 25 years, which gives her a practical lens most purely academic content tends to miss.

    Her work today focuses heavily on protein intake (especially for women), muscle retention, metabolic health, and sustainable fat loss, along with topics like sleep, wellness, recovery, and wearable health tech. You’ll also find a mix of high-protein, low-carb recipes designed to make hitting those goals easier without overcomplicating things.

    Cheryl’s interest in health and nutrition became more personal after navigating her own health challenges, which pushed her to dig deeper into how lifestyle, diet and daily habits impact long-term health. That experience continues to shape how she approaches everything on this site: practical, realistic, and focused on what actually works over time.

    What Cheryl Covers

    Most of the content here falls into a few core areas:

    Protein & Muscle Health: how much you actually need, especially for women and how to use protein to support strength, body composition, and aging
    Fat Loss & Metabolic Health: sustainable approaches that prioritize muscle retention and long-term results
    Healthy Habits & Lifestyle: sleep, movement, strength training, consistency, and the small things that compound over time
    Wearables & Recovery: real-world testing and comparisons of tools like Oura, Whoop and others
    High-Protein & Low-Carb Recipes: simple, realistic meals that support your goals without feeling restrictive
    Travel & Lifestyle: wellness-focused travel, outdoor experiences, and a slightly more elevated take on healthy living

    If you're new, here are a few good places to begin:

    30 Day Healthy Habits Challenge

    Protein Foundations

    High Protein Recipes

    About Cheryl & Heal Nourish Grow

    Coaching and Programs