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I know what you’re thinking – £75 is a lot of money to spend on an alarm clock when you could just use your phone (or get an analog alarm for a fiver). But hear me out.
Making the switch earlier this year has not only transformed my mornings, but also my evenings. Sleep has never been better. Really.
For years I’d been relying on the shrill chime of my iPhone to wake me up in the mornings. Its abrupt morning summons would repeat every five minutes for about half an hour (yes, I’m one of those people), while I eventually managed to open one eye and frown.
As a freelancer who works part-time in an office and the rest of the week from home, my sleep is a bit all over the place. Sometimes I get up at 6am, others not til 8am and if I’m not doing anything on the weekend it can be as late as 2pm. Don’t judge me, I like sleep.
These inconsistent mornings are coupled with the fact that I’ve never been able to fall asleep easily; if I nod off in an hour, I’d consider that success. I’m under no illusion as to why this is: my phone. I scroll through Instagram, Twitter, Youtube and repeat, endlessly – and while saying I’m “addicted” to my screen seems excessive, it is certainly a bad habit.
By the time I put my phone down my eyes are blurry and every morning I feel knackered.
Enter: Lumie, a brand specialising in wakeup lights, which my friend has been close to evangelical about. The aim of its products is to help people go to sleep and wake up with the help of light, rather than just an alarm noise.
I opt for the mid-range Bodyclock Spark 100 (RRP £74.99), but there are more basic lights for cheaper and more high tech versions at a higher cost.
Once out the box and plugged in, getting it to work is simple. I just adjusted my alarm time, set the brightness level for when the alarm goes off and picked a volume from one to five for the sound. I pick four, a loud enough beeping to rouse me mid-snooze, but not so loud I wake up pissed off.
I also played around with the sunset setting, a 30 minute feature that makes the light of the alarm (that giant dome bit) gradually fade through pink, orange and red then turns itself off, which is supposed to signal your body to ready for sleep and make you drowsy.
The first morning I used it, I woke up to the alarm was game-changing. There was no blaring bleeping that jolted me out of my sleep and when its winter and you wake up in a dark room, it gradually gets lighter with what I can only describe as a glow and the alarm sound gradually gets louder too so its not disruptive. To snooze it only takes a light tap on the dome, so easy to do without looking at it when you’re buried under your duvet.
But best of all, it stops me from looking at my phone as the last thing I do before I go to bed and the first thing I do when I wake up. I’d got so used to squinting blearily at my screen, trying to turn off the alarm, and its brightness left me feeling more awake than sleepy when I tried to go to bed. Because it’s so gradual, with both sound and light, I now wake up feeling more rested and in a better mood and that’s only continued throughout using it.
I love how it looks on my bedside too, it’s minimal and clean, not to mention easy to clean too. It doesn’t take up a huge amount of space but is plenty big enough to replace your bedside lamp, as when its set on full brightness, can light up a whole room.
Lumie Bodyclock Spark 100 Wake up to Daylight SAD Light, Amazon, RRP £74.99
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