Too tired to scroll at night? Try these low-effort, actually restful swaps that help you wind down, feel better, and sleep easier.
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Get it on Play StoreI get it. You’re wiped out, you flop onto the bed, and your thumb just starts doing its thing like it has a personal grudge against your sleep.
And honestly? Scrolling at night is sneaky. It feels like “rest,” but it usually leaves your brain more wired, your eyes more fried, and your sleep worse. I’ve done the “just five minutes” thing at 11:40 p.m. and somehow ended up reading a thread about medieval plumbing at 12:25. Not my proudest moment.
So if you’re tired at night, the goal isn’t to become a new person with a perfect evening routine. The goal is simpler — replace mindless scrolling with stuff that’s even easier and way more restorative.
This is my strongest opinion here: nighttime is not the time to “catch up” on life.
If you’re exhausted, don’t force a hero routine with journaling, stretching, reading, skincare, planning tomorrow, and becoming a better human in 14 minutes. That’s how you fail in a very boring way.
Instead, choose things that match your energy level. You’re tired, not broken. So your replacement should be low-effort, low-stimulation, and actually calming.
I’m obsessed with this idea because it removes decision fatigue. When you’re sleepy, your brain is basically a potato with Wi-Fi. So don’t ask it to invent a better plan at 10:30 p.m.
Make a tiny list of 5 things you can do instead of scrolling. Keep it simple:
That’s it. No elaborate system. Just a ready-made menu for tired nights.
If your phone is in your hand, scrolling will win. Every time.
So give it friction. Put it across the room, in a drawer, or on a charging station outside the bed. If that sounds dramatic, good. It should be.
I started doing this on nights when I was doomscrolling way too much, and it made a huge difference. Not because I became magically disciplined, but because walking five extra steps while tired is apparently enough to break the spell.
Action step: charge your phone away from your pillow tonight. If that feels impossible, at least switch it to grayscale and hide the apps that suck you in most.
Sometimes you don’t want “entertainment.” You want a tiny distraction while your body winds down. Hands help with that.
A few good options:
And yes, this sounds ridiculously basic. But that’s exactly why it works. Your brain gets a task, but not an exciting one.
The rule: if it feels slightly boring, that’s a win at night.
I used to think I needed to look at something to relax. Nope. That was just my screen addiction wearing a fake mustache.
Audio is better when you’re tired because it gives your brain something soft to hold onto without the endless trap of bright images, new posts, and random emotional chaos.
Try:
And keep the volume low. This isn’t a concert. It’s a landing strip.
Pro tip: choose audio that’s familiar. New content can pull you back into “just one more thing” mode.
When people say “night routine,” I picture some influencer with 12 candles and a robe that costs more than my groceries. Real life is not that.
You need a 3-minute reset. That’s it.
Here’s a super simple one:
Done.
This works because it gives your body a signal that the day is over. Tiny rituals matter more than dramatic ones. You’re teaching your brain: we’re done, we’re safe, we’re shutting down.
Reading is one of the best swaps for scrolling, but only if you pick the right kind of reading.
Don’t pick the book that makes you feel guilty for not reading it faster. Don’t pick something heavy unless you want to stay awake thinking about it for 2 hours.
Pick something easy:
I keep a “night book” by my bed on purpose. It’s not the book of my life. It’s the book that helps me stop staring at my phone like it owes me money.
Action step: put a real book where your phone usually sits. Make the better choice the easy choice.
This is where people usually quit. They think, “If I can’t do the whole routine, there’s no point.”
Nope. Hard disagree.
If you’re tired, do one tiny thing. Just one.
Examples:
That’s enough to interrupt the scroll loop. And sometimes one tiny thing becomes two, which is nice. But it doesn’t have to.
This matters because habits stick better when they’re almost embarrassingly easy. If the bar is too high, your exhausted brain will vote no every single time.
You don’t always need more willpower. Sometimes you need fewer traps.
A few things that help:
And if you’re serious, delete the worst offender for a week. One week. That’s not forever. That’s a test.
I know, I know — “but what if I miss something?” You won’t. And if you do, it’ll still be there tomorrow. The internet is not a rare flower.
Your body loves patterns. So give it one.
Pick the same cue every night, like:
That repetition matters more than motivation. If you do it enough, your brain starts associating those steps with sleep instead of stimulation.
And if you want a little structure, apps like Trider (myhabits.in) can help you track a tiny nighttime habit without making it annoying. The goal isn’t perfection — it’s just noticing what actually works.
You probably will. Because you’re human.
So here’s the real move: don’t treat it like failure. Treat it like information.
Ask yourself:
Sometimes the answer is not “do a better routine.” Sometimes it’s “go to bed earlier tomorrow” or “eat a proper dinner” or “I’ve been overstimulated all day.”
And sometimes, yes, you just need to lie there and breathe. That counts too.
If you want the shortest possible version, here it is:
That’s the whole thing.
No perfection. No productivity cosplay. Just a better landing.
And if you want help turning one tiny bedtime change into an actual habit, try Trider — it makes tracking the small stuff way less annoying.