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Workplace Wellness

Too Hot to Sleep, Too Tired to Cope: How Summer Heat Disrupts Rest and Mental Resilience

7/30/2025

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There’s nothing quite like trying to fall asleep while marinating in your own sweat.
The A/C’s barely cutting it. The sheets are sticky. Your brain won’t shut up. You toss, turn, scroll, curse the ceiling fan, and watch the clock slide past 2 a.m.
And then, like magic, your alarm goes off.

Welcome to the mental health slow burn of heat-induced sleep deprivation — a problem that's getting worse as summers get hotter and nights stay warmer.

The Science: Your Brain Needs to Cool Down to Power Down
Here’s the deal: your body needs to drop its core temperature slightly to fall asleep. That drop signals to your brain: “Okay, we’re safe. Let’s rest.”
But when it’s hot and humid at night, your body struggles to reach that cooler baseline. The result?
  • It takes longer to fall asleep
  • You wake up more often throughout the night
  • You get less deep, restorative sleep (especially REM)
And the next day, your brain is running on fumes.

Why Sleep Loss Hits Mental Health So Hard
When your sleep is fractured, so is your mind’s ability to:
  • Regulate emotion (cue anxiety, irritability, crying over spilled LaCroix)
  • Filter distractions (hello, ADHD-like fog)
  • Cope with stress (that 1 email feels like 12)
  • Recover from burnout (the tank doesn’t refill if you never rest)
And over time, sleep loss in high heat is associated with:
  • Increased rates of depression and anxiety
  • Higher suicide risk
  • Greater likelihood of workplace accidents or errors
  • Poorer interpersonal functioning (read: more fights and ghosting)

Sleep, Heat, and Neurochemistry: The Cocktail You Didn’t Ask For
The cocktail of heat + poor sleep messes with:
  • Melatonin production — your sleep hormone doesn’t like hot, bright environments
  • Cortisol levels — heat can delay your nightly cortisol drop, keeping you wired
  • Serotonin synthesis — disrupted sleep reduces mood stability
  • Thermoregulatory capacity — the hotter it is, the harder it is to bounce back
In short: the less you sleep, the more sensitive your brain becomes to stress… and the harder it becomes to sleep. It’s a vicious cycle with real consequences.

How to Sleep (Better) When the Heat Is Working Against You
You can’t always control your thermostat — but you can work with your biology.
Wind Down Smarter
  • Lower lights early — mimic sunset to cue melatonin
  • Ditch screens at least 45 minutes before bed (blue light delays sleep)
  • Try a cold foot bath or shower — cool the body’s periphery to jumpstart heat release
Cool the Room (Or at Least, Your Body)
  • Aim for 65–72°F if possible (body's sweet spot for sleep)
  • Use fans strategically (across the floor + one pointed at your legs)
  • Freeze a water bottle and keep it by your feet or under a pillow
  • Try breathable sheets and ditch heavy comforters
Adjust Your Sleep Window
  • Shift bedtime slightly later to align with cooler temperatures
  • Allow for 90-minute sleep cycles if you’re waking up often
  • Naps are not weak — short ones (20–30 min) can replenish mood + cognition

A Note for Employers and Teams
If you’re seeing more mistakes, more crankiness, more “checked-out” behavior in summer — pause before blaming burnout or disengagement.
It could be as simple as: your staff is hot and sleep-deprived.
What leaders can do:
  • Normalize adjusted hours during heatwaves
  • Allow asynchronous work to accommodate sleep recovery
  • Incorporate mental health breaks into summer workflows
  • Avoid judging productivity through a winter lens

You’re Not Just Tired — You’re Overheating and Under-Recovering
Sleep is where your brain repairs itself.
When summer heat strips that away, mental health doesn’t just dip — it deteriorates.

​The next time you find yourself lying awake at 1:37 a.m., drenched and restless, remember: it’s not your fault. It’s physics. And your brain is begging for compassion — not criticism.
Let’s stop treating sleep like a luxury and start treating it like what it is:
a foundational mental health tool.
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