The October Reset: Mood, Light & Sleep in Sync

By

Take a moment to look outside at your garden this month. Plants are slowing down, not dying, but conserving energy. Leaves fall, perennials retreat into their roots, and the soil begins to rest. It’s a time of recalibration, not weakness.

Your body often mirrors these shifts.

October can bring changes in energy, appetite, sleep, and even emotional tone. If you’re noticing more cravings, increased fatigue, or a tendency to withdraw socially, there may be a biological reason, not just a psychological one.

During this time of year, our internal systems can begin falling out of sync with the natural rhythms that once guided us, especially when modern life keeps us running on screens, artificial lighting, and overextended schedules.

Fortunately, making gentle shifts in light exposure, nourishment, and daily routines may help restore balance as we move deeper into the season.

Recalibrating with the Season: A Gentle Reset

Fall doesn’t require an overhaul. Small, intentional changes, grounded in circadian biology and ancestral patterns, can support your nervous system, mood, and rest.

1. Step Into the Morning Light

Our internal clock, known as the circadian rhythm, is largely regulated by light. Morning exposure to natural light plays a vital role in:

  • Suppressing melatonin (to help you feel more alert)
  • Supporting serotonin production (which helps regulate mood)
  • Stabilizing cortisol levels (which influence energy and stress)

What to try:

If possible, spend a few minutes outdoors within 30–60 minutes of waking. Even overcast skies provide the full-spectrum light your body uses to regulate itself. This one shift may positively influence your energy, mood, and sleep quality.

2. Try a “Digital Sunset” in the Evenings

Before electric lighting, the absence of daylight served as a signal to your body to wind down. Today, exposure to screens and artificial lights well into the evening can delay melatonin production and interfere with rest.

What to try:

Start by dimming lights after sunset. Power down screens 30–60 minutes before bed if you’re able, and consider replacing them with calming rituals, light stretching, reading, journaling, or simply quiet time. These cues can help your body prepare for rest without forcing it.

3. Support Neurotransmitters with Food and Movement

You may notice increased cravings for carbohydrates this month. That’s not just emotional; it may be physiological. As daylight hours decrease, serotonin levels may dip, affecting mood and prompting the body to seek quick energy sources.

Rather than resisting this completely, consider supporting serotonin production with nourishing foods that provide amino acid precursors, particularly tryptophan, found in high-quality proteins.

Consider including more of the following in meals:

  • Turkey and chicken
  • Beef (including cuts like skirt steak)
  • Fish, especially salmon, tuna, and sardines

Movement also supports serotonin and dopamine balance. A brisk walk, gentle strength training, or any form of consistent physical activity—especially outdoors—may improve emotional resilience and sleep quality.

What the Garden Already Knows

Just like the garden prepares itself for winter by pulling energy inward, your body may be asking for the same. It’s easy to misread these cues as signs of something being wrong—but often, they’re signals to slow down and adapt.

This isn’t about doing less. It’s about doing differently.

By adjusting your rhythms in ways that feel manageable, more light in the morning, less stimulation in the evening, nourishing proteins, and consistent movement, you create the conditions your body may need to stabilize and thrive through the season.

A Thought to Carry You Into the Month

We aren’t separate from nature; we’re part of it. As the world around us shifts into a slower gear, there’s wisdom in honoring those same cues within ourselves.

Whether you’re navigating fatigue, cravings, disrupted sleep, or low motivation, know that these responses aren’t failures. They may be invitations to shift.

October is not the time to power through. It may be time to slow down and realign.

© Copyright 2023 Modern Holistic Health. All rights reserved. | Privacy Policy
PHP Code Snippets Powered By : XYZScripts.com