The Key To Better Sleep? Strength Training!

The Key To Better Sleep? Strength Training!

One of the biggest questions I am asked on my platform is around Sleep. With the hormonal imbalances in midlife, coupled with increased stress, it can often make sleep fragmented and make it more difficult to not only fall asleep but also to stay asleep throughout the whole night.

Strength training can play a powerful role here – aside from building muscle, it is proven to help your body rest and recover more effectively too. Regular resistance exercise supports hormonal balance, reduces stress and helps regulate your sleep–wake cycle, all of which contribute to deeper, more restorative sleep. Over time, this connection between strength and sleep can be transformative, helping you feel more energised and better able to reclaim your sense of rest and vitality.

Why Does Sleep Get Harder in Midlife?

With age, our bodies naturally spend less time in deep, restorative sleep and more time in the lighter stages, which makes it easier to wake up throughout the night. Falling asleep in the first place can take longer, and those brief awakenings tend to feel more noticeable.

  • Hormonal shift
    Melatonin (your “sleepy” hormone) tends to be released later and in smaller amounts, while your growth hormone, somatotropin, which helps with overnight repair also declines. For women particularly, fluctuations in oestrogen and progesterone can directly affect body temperature and night waking in ways that aren’t always obvious.
  • Body clock changes
    You may find yourself feeling tired earlier in the evening and waking earlier too. That’s a natural circadian shift, which can leave you feeling out of sync and overtired.
  • You’re more sensitive to disruption
    Because sleep is lighter overall, things that never used to bother you like a warm room, alcohol, or even a late meal can now fragment your sleep more than you’d expect.
  • Stress
    Midlife often comes with a fuller mental load, and your brain has a tendency to “process” that the moment things go quiet. Even low-level, ongoing stress can raise nighttime cortisol just enough to make sleep feel broken.
  • Blood sugar swings
    As insulin sensitivity changes with age, dips in blood sugar during the night can trigger a subtle stress response (a small cortisol/adrenaline release).

How Does Strength Training Help?

Strength training directly targets many of the reasons sleep becomes lighter and more disrupted as we age. The result of strength training to support rest is not just “better sleep” in theory, but deeper, more consistent and genuinely restorative rest, from just a few well-structured workouts each week.

What makes strength training especially powerful is how it works behind the scenes to stabilise your body’s systems:

  • Balances blood sugar overnight – fewer early-morning wake-ups triggered by cortisol spikes
  • Strengthens your body clock – clearer signals for when to be awake and when to sleep
  • Reduces overall stress levels – making it easier to switch off at night
  • Builds natural sleep pressure – so you feel more ready for bed

What Happens in Your Body When You Lift?

Resistance training helps regulate hormones that are closely linked to healthy sleep. Exercise can improve the timing of melatonin release, the hormone that signals to your body when it is time to fall asleep. It also stimulates the release of growth hormone, which supports physical recovery during sleep. Together, these hormonal responses help the body prepare for sleep and promote deeper, more restorative rest -something that becomes especially important as natural hormone levels begin to change in midlife.

Stress and elevated cortisol levels are major enemies of sleep. Strength training reduces baseline stress and improves mood through endorphin release and improved nervous system balance.

Including physical activity especially when regular and done earlier in the day helps regulate your internal clock, making it easier to feel tired at night and wake refreshed in the morning.

Habits to Kick 

  1. Irregular sleep schedule
    Going to bed at very different times each night disrupts circadian rhythm.
  2. Caffeine and alcohol late in the day
    Both interfere with sleep onset and deep sleep, the key is to keep hydrated throughout the day.
  3. Late‑night high‑intensity workouts
    Very intense exercise close to bedtime can raise stress hormones and heart rate, making it harder to fall asleep. Aim to finish strength workouts at least 3 hours before bed.

Habits to Keep 

  1. Consistent strength training routine
    Aim for 2-4 resistance sessions per week that work all major muscle groups – legs, back, chest, shoulders, arms, and core.
  2. Morning light exposure
    Getting exposure early boosts circadian rhythm alignment – I always start my day with mobility and a walk with my dogs
  3. Evening wind‑down rituals
    Calm activities like light stretching, reading, or meditation signal bedtime to your brain. Find options that work for you and feel calming rather than a chore

Habits to Encourage

  1. Timing Your Training Well

Resistance training earlier in the day or late afternoon gives your body time to cool down and settle into its natural sleep rhythm by bedtime.

  1. Create a healthy environment

Keep your bedroom cool, dark, and quiet. Avoid screens 60–90 minutes before bed and remove bright light sources!

Final thoughts

Creating a consistent routine that combines regular strength training with supportive sleep habits can make a meaningful difference. By aiming for two to four strength sessions each week, focusing on compound movements and gradual progression, while also maintaining consistent sleep and wake times, getting morning light, and winding down before bed, you support both muscle health and your body’s natural sleep rhythms. Over time, these small but intentional habits work together to help regulate your internal clock, reduce stress, and create the conditions for deeper, more restorative sleep.

As always, any questions please do get in touch

Caroline x

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