Early Riser or Night Owl: Why It Doesn’t Really Matter

I bet you’ve heard this quote before:

“The early bird gets the worm…” – William Camden

Perhaps you’ve heard it in reference to your own sleeping habits. There are numerous articles on the web where writers tell you that one of the best ways to become more productive is to get up early. By doing so, you get a jumpstart on the rest of the world and reap the benefits of a quiet work environment — among other things.

Yet for the amount of articles that all about getting up early, there are many people who struggle to do just that. I’m one of them. I’ve tried time and time again to get up early, to “reset my internal clock” to make that happen…and I can’t seem to make it stick. While failure isn’t the worst thing in the world when it comes to this (and other efforts, for that matter), after trying to become an early riser more times than I can remember, this quote came to mind:

“Insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.” – Albert Einstein

Now I wasn’t doing the exact same thing each time I made an effort to change my sleeping and waking habits, but I realized that the act of trying to change my habits was the problem. That’s where the insanity was coming into play. I was frustrated that I simply couldn’t do what I thought I should be able to do — and I couldn’t figure out why it wasn’t working.

And then it came to me: I’m not meant to be an early riser. I am a night owl and I needed to embrace that rather than fight it.

Further to that, I examined how somebody who’s a night owl could essentially “hack their day” in the same way as an early riser does. Perhaps not surprisingly, the same benefits that apply to early risers can belong to night owls too.

Quiet Time

If you’re up past the bedtimes of those in your home, then you’re going to get the same sense of quiet that the early riser gets. Plus, if you woke up later in the morning, you won’t be as tired when you get down to whatever you plan to do with that quiet time because you’ve been awake for far longer than the early bird will be. As someone who does a lot of writing, I have found that I’m at my best in a creative sense later in the day, once all of my essential actions and errands have been taken care of. I call it my “Finally Time” — I finally have the clarity of thought, quiet I need and time I want to get my great work done.

Getting Ahead

While many are up at the crack of dawn and getting an early start to their day, I’m sleeping. And I’m no further behind because of it.

You see, I’ve already done the things that I needed to get a jump on the previous night. I’m no less productive than the early riser because I did what they do in the morning hours during the late hours the day beforehand; I am being proactive in my own way.

The notion that early risers are more productive than night owls is a myth. They just do “more productive” differently. How they allocate their time is the key.

Stop Struggling and Love the Late Hours

I started off by offering a very famous quote…but there’s more to it than what I initially delivered. My favourite addition to that quote is:

“The early bird gets the worm but the second mouse gets the cheese.” – Jeremy Paxman

To some that may mean that you should proceed with caution rather than be first into the fray, but I tend to look at it differently.

There is no advantage to being an early riser over being a night owl when it comes to increasing your productivity. It’s all in how you handle what comes at you – day and night – and making sure that you handle in it in a way that suits you and your lifestyle. If you find that you like getting up early, go for it. If you don’t, then don’t change that. Instead, put your efforts into making sure that your are being productive rather than when you are being more productive.

Listen to your mind and body and drive yourself to do more when it works for you. Don’t drive yourself insane trying to do anything that doesn’t.

(Photo credit: Time to Wake Up via Shutterstock)

  • http://www.clintcora.com Clint Cora

    I use to be a night owl for my first 35 years or so.  Then when I became really serious in snow skiing, I had to go to bed by 10 pm in order to get up early enough to make it to the ski slopes for the fresh snow first thing in the morning. I hate getting up early and many ski days this will mean up by 6 am and leaving the door by 6:45 am to get on the snow by 9 am.  But once I’m on the snow for my first run before the crowds and before the snow gets too chopped up, I’m always really glad that I got up early.

    On my non-ski days during the winter, I end up getting up almost just as early because of my sleep cycle adjustment.  Before, this was just seasonal as after the winter, I went back to a later rising schedule.  However, I’m going to consider for the first time ever, continuing with this early schedule after the winter to see how it goes.  I am quite productive early in the morning and my day will be okay especially if I take a short nap in the afternoon.

    I use to work late into the night but in recent years, I seem to want to do less of that.  Maybe I’m getting older or something.  Besides, my dogs seem to want to get up early and they will start konking out by about 10:30 pm anyway.  Maybe they are starting to influence when I sleep and wake too.

  • http://twitter.com/blubadger Rollo

    All true. It is probably even genetic (there was an article about it in the Economist a while back). Some people are more “larks” and others “owls”. It’s worth remembering that there have been many famously productive owls. Winston Churchill managed to write “eight to ten million words in more than 40 books and thousands of newspaper and magazine articles” (Wikipedia), all while going to bed at dawn and getting up at midday.

  • Chris Dinesen Rogers

    Thank you for vindicating the night owl lifestyle! I too, have struggled with trying to change into an early riser. However, I enjoy my me-time too much to try and change. I still harbored some guilt. Your post changed this.

  • http://www.facebook.com/beth.storheim Beth Storheim

    Nice article. It’s nice to hear some vindication for us night owls.

    However, I was hoping for more practical advice on how to live as a Night Owl in an Early Bird world. The working world is not really built to accommodate late-risers. I have to get up at 6:00 am for work at 8:00 am, which means to get a really good sleep I ought to be in bed by 9:00 pm. For whatever reason, and I don’t really know why, I just can’t get into the head-space of “bedtime” at 9 or 10 o’clock, so I invariably get to bed by midnight or 1:00 am, or 11:00 pm at the earliest. This, naturally, has the negative consequence of sleep deprivation. But no matter how sleep deprived I get, I just can’t seem to get to bed any earlier than 11:00 pm. If I try going to bed earlier if I’m tired, I end up lying awake in bed for however long anyway.

    This is not a new phenomenon for me – as a kid I often stayed up until 1:00 am on school nights, and didn’t realize until I was 10 or 11 that that was not a “normal” bedtime for most kids. I should note that on vacations my body clock follows an even later Night Owl schedule: to bed at 2:00 or 3:00 am, and to rise anywhere between 10 am and 1:00 pm! Sometimes I’ve woken up at 2:00 or 3:00 in the afternoon, and feel chagrined for missing half the day!

    I wonder how much of my problem is psychological and how much is brain chemistry? Also, I have been overweight for much of my life, so I’m sure that’s a component.

  • http://twitter.com/StevenHandel The Emotion Machine

    The real answer is just do what works best for YOU.

  • Chuck Miller

    I find that I can get a second-wind that allows me to work into the wee hour of the morning. BUT I pay for it in spades the next day, I have a full-time day job that requires me to rise at 5:00. So the issue isn’t whether I wish to rise early to be creative, OR stay late to be creative (Owl or Lark), the issue is when do I sleep.

    Having survived on 4-5 hours of sleep for months on end, I have finally committed to getting seven hours of rest every day. Since I have done that, I can be productive or creative anytime.

  • http://twitter.com/_SarahhP Sarah Patrick

    I’m really glad that finally somebody came to their senses and wrote an article such as yours. For example, I as well, am a creative professional. Most of the creativity seems to blossom later in the day, during “Finally Time,” and I’m so glad to read an article that is totally speaking to me and several other Night Owls saying, “Its okay to be you, and its okay to be a Night Owl.” I have tried several times to change my habits, and it only makes things worse. More frustrated, and then you end up noticing how you just ruined half of your day trying to change those habits when maybe we should all be thinking about “how were being productive” and not “when were being productive.”

  • http://profile.yahoo.com/CW2IKBDTHZHDJJL37TLJ7HOXAM Lulu

    Fantastic!At last it is out in the open. My own night owl behaviour originated in the long-haul of chronis illness where dealing with exhaustion in a supportive way to allow my work to continue meant adaption and change to SUIT MYSELF. I too just do not function ‘properly’ in the mornings – at least not until after 11-00am and it isn’t just because I have ‘allowed’ myself to get into ‘bad habits’. My clients and friends are often amazed when I tell them they really CAN call me until 2-00am in the morning. Not so amazingly to me many of them do because they too do not go to bed when they ‘should’ yet lead productive and happy lives. We share this ‘guilty secret’ together as if there is something wrong with us. No more – Hurrah!

    Sometimes I get up before 11-00am and ALWAYS need several short naps during the day. And I allow myself to have them. If I then also need an early night, say midnight, then by the next day I’m back into the 2-00am bedtime with no loss of productivity or enjoyment. One of my long-term clients often suggests a nap in the middle of our working days together. Bliss.

    My two cats join in with my nappng and activity and a friend reminded me today when I read out Jeremy P’s comment about the worm and the mouse, ‘ ‘Eagles may soar but weasels don’t get sucked into jet engines’. (Dilbert?)