It’s 3:07 AM.
Again.
You’re wide awake, eyes fixed on the glowing digits of the clock. You’ve tried breathing deeply, counting sheep, flipping the pillow – but sleep won’t return.
If you’re a woman over 60, this is not just you. It’s biology. And it’s more common than you think.
But here’s the good news: There are gentle, natural ways to reclaim the deep, delicious sleep your body still craves. Sleep that repairs, restores, and revitalizes you – so you wake up refreshed and ready to live fully.
Let’s explore what’s really going on and what you can do, starting tonight.
As we age, several changes conspire to disrupt our once-reliable rest:
Estrogen and progesterone, both deeply tied to sleep, drop during and after menopause. The result? More restless nights and lighter, broken sleep.
Melatonin – your body’s natural sleep hormone – decreases sharply with age. By your 60s, you may produce a fraction of what you once did, making it harder to fall (and stay) asleep.
These changes are natural. But that doesn’t mean you have to suffer through them. With the right support, your sleep can improve – naturally.
Waking up between 2:00–4:00 AM is often a signal – not just an annoyance.
🌿 In Traditional Chinese Medicine, this is liver time. Your liver is actively processing and cleansing — but if it’s sluggish or overburdened (from toxins, stress, sugar, alcohol, or medications), it may cause these nighttime disturbances.
🌪 It can also be a sign of adrenal fatigue or high cortisol, the stress hormone.
Cortisol is your “get-up-and-go” hormone. It’s meant to be highest in the morning and gently taper through the day. But in a body under stress – especially with weakened adrenal glands, which is common after decades of go-go-go – cortisol can peak at the wrong times.
If your cortisol is too high in the evening or early night, you may feel wired but exhausted, with a racing mind, shallow sleep, and those infamous early morning wakeups.
Before sleep can happen, your nervous system must feel safe. Try deep breathing, yoga, or a warm bath with Epsom salts in the evening.
Magnesium helps calm the body and brain – and many women over 50 are deficient. Magnesium citrate is a gentle form that can ease tension and even support regularity.
This trio of time-tested herbs can calm the nervous system and promote deep relaxation. Sip as a tea or find a natural sleep supplement with these included.
Many women over 60 benefit from 3–6 mg of melatonin, especially when taken right before bed or kept on the nightstand to take at 3 AM when sleep won’t return.
Blue light from phones or TVs can suppress melatonin and delay sleep by up to 40 minutes. Power down at least an hour before bed.
Set your bedroom to 60–67°F and block light with curtains or a sleep mask. Your brain needs total darkness to produce melatonin.
Support your liver with leafy greens, lemon water, and herbs like milk thistle or dandelion root. A gentle cleanse can help reduce those 2 AM disruptions.
A peaceful mind and heart create the best sleep. Journaling, prayer, soft music, or a calming routine before bed signals your body it’s time to rest.
If you’re ready to finally sleep like a (very good) baby again, download your free copy of:
🌙 The Wise Woman’s Sleep Ritual
A calming bedtime guide for women 50+ who want deeper, more peaceful rest.
This gentle 5-step ritual helps you create a sacred wind-down, quiet a racing mind, and support the hormonal shifts that come with wisdom and age.
You deserve rest. You deserve restoration. You deserve to wake up ready to live fully.
When was the last time you had a full-night’s sleep? Was it natural or induced? What do you do so you can sleep through the night without waking?
If you were not able to access the guide, please find it HERE.
Tags How to Sleep Better
I have Alexa play Ocean Sounds by Ocean Sounds for eight hours. This helps lull me to sleep. I take two Tylenol night with a with a very cold glass of water and I sleep for at least six hours. I may get up in the middle of the night but just to use the loo then I’m back to sleep.I’ve tried teas and melatonin and neither seem to work for me. I feel lucky at 65 to be able to sleep.
Yes, this article was on point. I never had a sleep problem until I retired. The information in this read was extremely helpful. Thank you!
I find drinking a cup of camomile and lavender tea before bed helps me sleep at night. If I drink just camomile it acts as a diuretic and I have to go to the loo at 4am.
Relaxation music helps if my mind is too active.