— difficulty falling asleep, staying asleep, or waking too early — affects millions of Indians, worsened by heat, urban noise, late-night screen use, and work stress. Most sleep problems respond well to behavioural changes before medication is needed. The approach below is based on cognitive behavioural therapy for insomnia (CBT-I) principles adapted for Indian home life.
Common Causes of Poor Sleep in India
- High nighttime temperatures and humidity, especially April through June
- Late dinners, heavy spicy meals, and evening chai with caffeine
- Screen use before bed — phones, streaming, and work messages
- Urban noise — traffic, construction, and festival celebrations
- Stress, , and irregular work schedules including night shifts
- Air pollution affecting breathing quality during sleep
Sleep Environment Fixes
Cool the bedroom
Ideal sleep temperature is 20–24°C. Use cotton bedsheets, a fan or air cooler, and light breathable nightwear. A lukewarm shower 30–60 minutes before bed lowers core body temperature and signals sleep readiness. Keep curtains drawn during the day to prevent rooms heating up.
Reduce light and noise
Even dim phone light suppresses melatonin. Use blackout curtains or an eye mask. For noise, earplugs or a white noise fan help in cities. If mosquitoes are a problem, use a net or safe repellent — and buzzing destroy sleep quality.
Dedicate the bed to sleep
Avoid working, eating, or scrolling in bed. This trains your brain to associate the bed only with sleep, which CBT-I identifies as one of the most effective insomnia interventions.
Clinical guidance from NIMH[1] stresses matching home care to symptom severity and seeking urgent review when red-flag signs appear.
Bedtime Routine and Habits
Consistent sleep schedule
Wake at the same time every day — including weekends. This anchors your circadian rhythm more effectively than a fixed bedtime. If you cannot sleep after 20 minutes, get up, do something quiet in dim light, and return when drowsy.
Limit caffeine and alcohol
Avoid chai, coffee, and cola after 2 pm. Alcohol may help you fall asleep initially but fragments sleep later in the night. Finish dinner at least two to three hours before bed — heavy meals cause reflux that wakes you.
Wind-down ritual
Spend 30 minutes before bed on low-stimulation activities — reading, gentle stretching, or listening to calm music. Avoid news, social media, and work emails. Deep breathing — inhale for four counts, exhale for six — activates the parasympathetic nervous system.
Morning sunlight
Get 15–20 minutes of outdoor light within an hour of waking. This resets your internal clock and improves sleep drive that evening. Particularly important if you work indoors all day.
Sleep Tips for Indian Summer Nights
During peak summer, place a damp cloth on the forehead after your shower, use a thin cotton sheet instead of a heavy blanket, and keep a glass of water bedside — mild dehydration wakes you at night. Cross-ventilation with windows on opposite walls beats a single fan when power cuts are common. If mosquitoes disrupt sleep, address that first — no sleep technique works when you are being bitten. Consider shifting demanding mental work to morning hours when heat and are lower.
For verification and deeper reading, NHS[2] offers independent, evidence-based information you can cross-check with your own clinician.
When to See a Doctor
- Insomnia lasting more than three weeks despite lifestyle changes
- Loud snoring, gasping, or breathing pauses — possible sleep apnoea
- Restless legs or uncomfortable limb sensations at night
- Daytime sleepiness affecting driving or work safety
- Insomnia accompanied by persistent low mood or anxiety
Related Guides
References & further reading
Sources cited in this guide. DIMH links to independent medical institutions for verification — not as a substitute for personal medical advice.
- NIMH — Mental health informationhttps://www.nimh.nih.gov/health
- NHS — Mental healthhttps://www.nhs.uk/mental-health/
- NIH — Complementary and integrative healthhttps://www.nccih.nih.gov/
- MedlinePlus — Herbal medicinehttps://medlineplus.gov/herbalmedicine.html
- NIH — Migrainehttps://www.ninds.nih.gov/health-information/disorders/migraine
- NHS — Headacheshttps://www.nhs.uk/conditions/headaches/
When home care is not enough: chest pain, trouble breathing, confusion, or symptoms that worsen quickly need urgent medical attention.
Leave a Reply