What Midnight Used to Mean
Have you ever woken up in the middle of the night, wide-eyed and alert, only to think: โGreat, now Iโve got insomniaโ? You’re not alone, and you might not be wrong, exactly, but you’re not broken either.
Hereโs the twist: what if waking up in the middle of the night isnโt a problemโฆ but a feature?
Back When Nighttime Had a Coffee Break
In the good old (okay, pretty grimy) days of the Middle Ages, In Fact all the way back through history, people didnโt sleep the way we do now. They didnโt expect a solid, uninterrupted 7โ9 hours of blissful unconsciousness. Nope. They slept in two chunks, a pattern now called biphasic sleep.
People would tuck in not long after sunset, sleep for a few hours (this was called “first sleep”), wake up for an hour or two, and then drift back off for their “second sleep” until dawn. No melatonin gummies required.
That middle-of-the-night window wasnโt dreaded, it was used. People:
- Said their prayers (monks especiallyโMatins was basically divine midnight duty).
- Lit a candle and read (if they could read).
- Chatted with a partner or family.
- Checked on animals, babies, or suspicious noises outside.
- Yes, had sex (some 16th-century advice even claimed it was the best time for conception).
In short: it was a kind of quiet, contemplative โbonus hour.โ You could call it medieval me-time.
Enter: the Lightbulb, Literally
As we moved into the 18th and 19th centuries. Along came the invention of street lamps, candles that people could afford to burn, and later, electric lighting. Suddenly, it was easier (and expected) to stay up late. Factories and offices ran on strict schedules. The biphasic rhythm was flattened into one long block of monophasic sleep and that became the new โnorm.โ
The trouble isโฆ our bodies didnโt totally get the memo.
Are We Fighting Our Own Clocks?
Many people nowย find themselves waking at 2 or 3 AM and spiraling into panic: โThis is it. Iโm doomed. Iโll never fall back to sleep again.โ But what if this is just your inner medieval self trying to stretch their legs?
Studies around the way we sleep, the types of sleep patterns over history show that when people live in darkness for long stretches with no phones, no Netflix, no artificial lights, they naturally fall into a biphasic rhythm. Two sleeps, one wakeful period in the middle. Just like the past.
So maybe you donโt have insomnia after all. Maybe youโre just doing what people did for centuries before the industrial age, could it just be that your body craves those two sleep and that โwatchโ period. Maybe youโre not failing at sleep and your body is trying to remember what it used to do for centuries.
Should We Bring It Back?
Would we sleep better if we leaned into a biphasic lifestyle? Maybe! It could mean:
- Accepting that waking up in the night is normal
- Ditching the panic spiral for a book, some quiet music, or journaling
- Being kinder to yourself and your bodyโs ancient rhythmsย
- Listening to what your body is asking of you
Even just shifting your expectations could help. If you wake up at 2 AM, maybe itโs not insomnia. Maybe itโs a needed intermission.
A Quiet Return
Look, most of us canโt live like itโs 1450. We have alarms, schedules, most have school runs, Zoom meetings, work. Thereโs no turning back that clock completely, and it is okay. But, just maybe we can let go of the idea that waking up at 2 AM means that something is wrong.
Because for centuries, that was just life. Normal. Expected. That quiet little gap in the middle of the night was its own kind of time, slow, still, reflective. And maybe thereโs something in us that still remembers and needs it.
So, next time you wake up and look at the clock, donโt groan when you see itโs early in the morning. Instead breathe, and enjoy a moment of midnight peace. Read a little. Allow yourself to think, ponder, and just relax. Maybe sip some tea. Do something quiet.
Youโre not broken.
Youโre just medieval.
By Eska Kent

Very interesting and informative, Eska. Now I know why I aways wake up at 4 am and have a cup of tea in bed while playing a word game on my phone. ๐ Then when it’s really time to get working I’m ready to go back to sleep.
Its internal and something not many people know about at all. Our natural sleep cycle before we started the so called 9-5
https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20220107-the-lost-medieval-habit-of-biphasic-sleep
As someone who struggled with “getting a solid sleep”, when I first read this many years ago, it gave me permission to change my sleep schedule and embrace my innate tendencies. Now I don’t stress, and toss and turn, I get up and do a few things. Gentle, quiet, and pleasant things. And before long, I am too tired and go back to bed for sleep number two.
It makes for so much sense, I also read that same article. It is a good read.
Did you also know that several of those isolation studies the have performed on humans have shown that when cut off from all outside contact and are fed when we are hungry…..we revert to being nocturnal
Yea one of the studies I looked at said much the same, with no time and no lighting, our bodies just function as and when.
75% of my nights I’m awake at 3:00am….I get up and make a chamomile tea, do a couple of rounds of Solitaire and back to sleep around 4:00. So that must be the reason Thanks Thelma. So even though we strive for sophistication our primitive senses are still concealed deep within us….On the other side of the coin lol have you noticed how computers are now asking us to confirm we aren’t robots???
Hahah the world has us convinced we are faulty, and robots ๐