Sleep without forcing it. This is the one small shift we are exploring this month. Sleep is not something we accomplish. It is something the body allows. Yet many of us approach sleep the same way we approach work or productivity: we try to fix it, optimize it, and solve it.
When sleep doesn’t come easily, we respond by adding more pressure checking the clock, reviewing the day, planning tomorrow, or searching for solutions at midnight. This month, we are doing something different.
Instead of trying to control sleep, we are creating a small window that allows it to happen naturally. The practice of sleeping without forcing it sounds simple, but for many people it requires a genuine shift in how they approach the end of the day. This is not about adding another habit to an already full life. It is about stepping back and allowing rest to arrive on its own terms.
Problem-solving tasks. Work-related thinking. Screen exposure. Sleep research consistently shows that these activities before bed slow sleep onset and reduce sleep quality. Studies on sleep hygiene suggest that reducing mental and environmental stimulation before bed helps signal to the brain that the day is ending.
A comprehensive review by Irish et al. (2015, Sleep Medicine Reviews) found that behaviors such as lowering stimulation, limiting screen exposure, and creating a transition period before bed are associated with improved sleep onset and sleep quality.
That means sleep often improves not when we force it, but when we give the nervous system space to downshift. The shift is not about adding effort it is about removing the obstacles that keep the brain in alert mode.

Once this week, protect 30 minutes before sleep from stimulation. No screens. No problem-solving. No planning tomorrow. Just a pause. Sleeping without forcing it means stepping back and letting the body lead and that single act is the entire practice.
Keep this practical and low effort. Consider trying some of these:
The goal is not productivity. The goal is transition.
Throughout the day, your nervous system is active processing conversations, decisions, notifications, and information. When constant stimulation continues right up until bedtime, the brain remains in a state of cognitive activation, making it harder for sleep to begin.
Even short reductions in stimulation can help the body shift toward the parasympathetic state that supports sleep. This is the core of sleeping without forcing it: you are not adding effort, you are removing it. You are creating the conditions the body already knows how to respond to.
This connects to the broader work of nervous system regulation. If you are navigating burnout or high-demand seasons in clinical research, The Three Breaks We All Need by Brittany Sloan explores how reconnecting, realigning, and reclaiming energy can support sustainable well-being in this field.
Sleep doesn’t need to be forced. It needs space.
For research participants, clinicians, and professionals alike, this matters. Small environmental shifts can influence sleep just as much as large lifestyle changes. Sometimes the smallest shift is simply creating a quiet moment before sleep and letting the body do what it already knows how to do.
Let that be enough.
Brittany Sloan is a health and wellness coach, yoga teacher, and run coach who brings two decades of clinical research experience into every conversation about well-being. Her background spans academic medical centers and sponsor-level roles, from clinical assistant and study coordinator to regulatory and compliance work, giving her a grounded, evidence-informed perspective on what truly keeps people well.
She is the founder of ThreeBreaks Wellness, a coaching and consulting practice rooted in restoration, self-trust, and sustainable healing. Her work is deeply shaped by a love for Black people—our health, our stories, our survival, and our joy.
Brittany supports clients in reconnecting with themselves, realigning their lives, and reclaiming the parts of their well-being that systems have historically ignored. She shows up with warmth, honesty, and a steady, nurturing presence, offering guidance that is both compassionate and direct. Her work is grounded in the belief that Black folks deserve care that honors the fullness of who we are.