Stop trading sleep for "me time," a habit known as "revenge bedtime procrastination." Reclaim control by building a deliberate evening routine and making your morning, not the late night, your reward.
It’s 1 AM. You have to be up in five hours, but you’re still scrolling. You're not an insomniac; you're actively choosing not to sleep.
People on Reddit have a name for this: "revenge bedtime procrastination." You sacrifice sleep for the "me time" you didn't get all day. Your brain is trying to get revenge for a schedule you don't control by stealing leisure from the only place it can: your sleep.
But the only person you're getting revenge on is the exhausted, caffeine-dependent version of you tomorrow. Here's how to stop the cycle, based on what works for people who've actually broken it.
Most people who put off sleep don't lack discipline. They have demanding jobs or schedules that make them feel like their time isn't their own. When 10 PM hits and all the obligations are met, it's the first moment of freedom they've had all day. Going to sleep feels like surrendering that last bit of personal time and fast-forwarding to the next morning when the demands start again.
The fix isn't to force yourself into bed. It's about finding a sense of control. The real solution is to carve out that "you time" earlier in the evening, before you're already running on fumes.
A good wind-down routine isn't about avoiding screens—it's about creating a deliberate off-ramp from your day that tells your brain it's time to shut down. This shouldn't feel like another chore. It should be something you actually want to do.
I remember one night I was deep in a Reddit rabbit hole about vintage synthesizers. I looked at the clock and it was 4:17 AM. My 2011 Honda Civic was going to feel very uncomfortable to drive to work in a couple of hours. That was the day I started charging my phone in the kitchen.
Instead of seeing the late night as your only reward, make your morning something you actually want to wake up for. This sounds impossible when you're exhausted, but it changes the entire reason you go to bed.
Wake up 30-45 minutes earlier to do something for yourself. Read, write, or just have a quiet cup of coffee before anyone else is awake. You're taking your time back, but on your own terms. The morning becomes the reward, and going to bed on time feels less like a punishment and more like the prep work for something good.
Use a simple habit tracker. Set a goal: "in bed by 11 PM." Every night you hit it, mark it off. Seeing a streak build is more powerful than you'd think. It turns the vague goal of "sleeping better" into a concrete game you can win.
Building a new habit isn't about virtue; it's a skill. It requires a plan. Work backward from when you need to wake up and schedule your wind-down like any other appointment.
Stop studying harder and start studying smarter. Learn active techniques to truly understand your subjects and avoid burnout, instead of just memorizing the textbook.
Stop cramming for Class 9 and start building a real foundation for your board exams. Learn how to study smarter, not harder, by focusing on understanding concepts and using revision techniques that actually work.
Stop studying harder for Class 10 and start studying smarter. Learn to master concepts over rote memorization and use effective techniques like active recall and time management to succeed without the burnout.
Studying is a skill, not a talent you're born with. Learn to ditch the all-nighters and find a study rhythm that actually works for you.
Download Trider to access AI tools and publish your routines.
Get it on Play Store