Can’t fall asleep? Learn the 20-minute rule for insomnia, when to get out of bed, what to do instead, and how to stop making nights worse.
Privacy policy for Mindcrate website
Not getting results from your habit tracker? Here’s how to tell when it’s time to switch methods, with clear signs and better options.
Simple habit trackers beat fancy ones because they’re easier to use daily. Here’s why boring wins, plus practical tips to stick longer.
Can habit tracking improve your sleep? Learn how to test it with a simple 14-day experiment, track the right habits, and spot what really works.
Download Trider to access AI tools and publish your routines.
Get it on Play StoreYou know that weird, annoying moment when you’ve been in bed forever, staring at the ceiling, and your brain decides 2 a.m. is the perfect time to replay every embarrassing thing you’ve ever done? Yeah. Been there.
And the first instinct is usually: stay put and try harder. But that’s exactly where a lot of people mess up. When sleep isn’t happening, your bed can stop feeling like a place to rest and start feeling like a place to struggle.
So the big question is: should you get out of bed after 20 minutes, or just tough it out?
My honest answer: if you’re awake and frustrated, get up.
The 20-minute rule is simple: if you can’t fall asleep after about 20 minutes, or you wake up and can’t get back to sleep, leave the bed and do something calm in dim light.
It’s not a strict stopwatch thing. You do not need to panic at exactly 20:01 like the sleep police are coming. But the idea is solid: if sleep isn’t happening, stop teaching your brain that bed = stress.
That matters more than people think. Your brain is basically a pattern machine. If you lie there tossing and turning for an hour, it starts linking your bed with alertness, frustration, and mental chaos.
I used to do this thing where I’d stay in bed and “rest” even if I wasn’t sleeping. Sounded logical. Felt responsible. Was completely useless.
Here’s the problem: resting in bed while stressed can train insomnia. Your body is tired, but your brain gets sharper the longer you lie there worrying about sleep.
And the stress builds fast:
That spiral is gasoline on the fire.
So no, staying put isn’t the brave option. Sometimes it’s the thing making the problem worse.
Get up if any of this sounds familiar:
And here’s the important part: don’t stay in bed just because you think you should. Sleep doesn’t come from effort. It comes from letting your body get ready for it.
If you’re forcing it, you’re usually doing the opposite.
So you got up. Good. Now don’t go scroll Instagram or start answering emails like it’s an emergency.
Do something boring, quiet, and low-light. The goal is to get sleepy again, not productive.
Try one of these:
But keep it simple and dull. This is not the moment to reorganize your kitchen or “finally get ahead on work.”
This part matters a lot.
Don’t:
And definitely don’t treat the night like a failure. One bad stretch doesn’t mean you’re broken. It means your sleep system got a little overcooked.
Go back only when you feel sleepy again, not just tired or bored.
There’s a difference. Tired can mean exhausted but alert. Sleepy means your eyes are heavy, your thoughts are slowing down, and you’d probably doze off sitting on a couch.
That’s the cue.
If you go back too early, you might just repeat the same cycle. And honestly, that’s how people end up lying there for another 45 minutes getting mad at the mattress.
Here’s a practical routine you can use tonight:
It sounds almost too simple, but that’s the point. Your brain learns through repetition. If you do this consistently, your bed starts becoming a cue for sleep again.
This one helped me a lot: stop thinking, “I have to sleep now.”
That sentence is a trap. It turns sleep into a performance test.
Try this instead: “I’m just giving my body a chance to sleep.”
Way less pressure. Way more realistic.
And if your brain starts yelling, “But I need 8 hours!”, remind yourself that one rough night is annoying, but it’s not a disaster. People survive bad sleep all the time. The panic about sleep is often worse than the sleep loss itself.
Same rule.
If you wake up and can’t drift back off after about 20 minutes, get out of bed. Keep the lights low. Keep your activities boring. Don’t start doing “just a few things” on your phone, because that’s basically telling your nervous system to wake up and stay awake.
And if you’re tempted to watch the clock, cover it or turn it away. Clock-watching is like feeding the anxiety monster.
The 20-minute rule works best when your sleep setup isn’t already a mess.
Try these:
And if your sleep is all over the place, tracking patterns can help. I like using Trider (myhabits.in) because it makes it stupidly easy to see what habits are helping or hurting sleep without turning it into a science project.
If insomnia keeps happening for weeks, or it’s making you miserable during the day, don’t just “push through.” Talk to a doctor or sleep specialist.
Especially if you have:
Sleep problems are common, but they’re not something you have to just live with forever.
My take: if you’re awake, frustrated, and clearly not falling asleep, get out of bed.
That’s the whole point of the 20-minute rule. You’re not punishing yourself. You’re protecting your bed from becoming a stress zone.
And honestly, that tiny shift can change a lot. Less tossing. Less panic. More actual sleep.
Try the rule for a week, keep it simple, and track what happens. If you want an easy way to build that kind of sleep habit, give Trider a shot at myhabits.in — it’s a nice little nudge when your brain’s being dramatic at 2 a.m.