The hours before sleep set conditions for recovery from gut-brain axis. An intentional evening routine can break the cycle of gut-brain axis disrupting sleep disrupting gut-brain axis.
Why Evening Routine Matters for Gut-Brain Axis
Sleep is the most powerful gut-brain axis recovery mechanism — and the evening routine determines sleep quality. Without it, gut-brain axis persists through the night.
The Evidence-Based Evening Routine for Gut-Brain Axis
2 hours before bed — reduce stimulation:
- Dim lights (signals melatonin production)
- No screens with blue light (or blue light blocking glasses)
- Avoid stimulating content (news, work emails)
1 hour before bed — wind down:
- Gentle physical activity: stretching or yoga
- Calming activities: reading fiction, warm bath, light conversation
- Brief reflection: what went well today? (shifts from gut-brain axis rumination)
30 minutes before bed — prepare:
- Consistent bedtime
- Cool, dark room
- Brief mindfulness or progressive muscle relaxation
When Gut-Brain Axis Makes Sleep Impossible
If gut-brain axis is causing significant sleep disruption, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Insomnia (CBT-I) combined with gut-brain axis treatment is the most effective approach.