Wind-down hour designer
Build the last hour before sleep — screens taper, body settles.
Sleep starts an hour before the lights go out.
Tapering the last hour of the evening so sleep starts on cue.
Why it matters
A designer for the final hour of your teen's evening: it lays out a simple taper — bright screens off first, quiet activities next, phone on the charger last — and prints it as a one-page evening card. The sleep tool tells you when the phone goes down; this one fills the hour after, which is where most plans quietly fail. You choose from realistic wind-down blocks (shower, music, reading, stretching, tomorrow's bag) and the tool sequences them from most to least stimulating. What comes out is an evening your teen can actually follow, not a bedtime they negotiate.
The tool
A printable one-page wind-down hour designed around your teen's evening.
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Key points
- Taper stimulation across the last hour — don't cliff-drop it.
- Replace the scroll with a real activity, not an empty rule.
- Same sequence nightly: the routine itself becomes the sleep cue.
The science
Sleep scientists describe a wind-down as a runway: melatonin rises only when light and stimulation fall, so the hour before bed sets the night's trajectory. Bright, interactive screens are doubly disruptive — the light delays the body clock while the engagement keeps arousal high. Replacing rather than removing is the evidence-backed move: quiet activities fill the space the scroll occupied, which is why taper plans outperform cold-turkey cutoffs. Consistency matters more than perfection; the same rough sequence nightly trains the body to start sleep on cue.
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Take it with you
Keep this where it's useful — send it to yourself or a co-parent, drop a reminder in your calendar, or copy it to hand off.
Wind-down hour designer
Sleep starts an hour before the lights go out.
The skill you're building
Tapering the last hour of the evening so sleep starts on cue.
Key points
- Taper stimulation across the last hour — don't cliff-drop it.
- Replace the scroll with a real activity, not an empty rule.
- Same sequence nightly: the routine itself becomes the sleep cue.
A printable one-page wind-down hour designed around your teen's evening.
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