You’re a Black Bear!

You can usually sleep, but your sleep does not always feel deep, restorative, or refreshing.

You may not struggle as much with falling asleep as some other profiles do. In fact, you might fall asleep fairly easily. But when morning comes, you still feel heavy, groggy, or like your sleep did not really do its job.

What this profile usually means

The Black Bear profile usually points to a sleep pattern where the problem is not always getting to sleep. The problem is the quality of the sleep you are getting.

You may sleep for a decent number of hours, and from the outside it may even look like you sleep “fine.” But that does not always match how you feel when you wake up. Instead of feeling clear, restored, and ready to go, you may feel slow, heavy, foggy, or like you need a long runway to feel functional.

For people in this profile, sleep tends to be more about depth and restoration than bedtime struggle or random wakeups. You may be able to sleep through the night, but still wake up feeling like your system never fully recharged.

This profile often shows up in people who can get enough sleep on paper, but still do not feel like they are truly recovering from it.

What tends to make your sleep worse

  • Poor sleep quality even when total sleep time looks okay
  • Going to bed overly exhausted instead of properly wound down
  • Alcohol too close to bedtime
  • Heavy meals late at night
  • Warm, stuffy, or uncomfortable sleep environments
  • Inconsistent sleep schedules that reduce sleep quality
  • Sleep that is long enough, but not deep enough

  • For a Black Bear, sleep usually gets worse when the night becomes less restorative. The issue is often not simply “more sleep.” It is whether your sleep actually feels deep, steady, and renewing enough to leave you feeling like yourself in the morning.
  • What tends to make your sleep better

    • A cooler, darker, more comfortable bedroom
    • More consistent bed and wake times
    • Avoiding alcohol too close to bed
    • Leaving more time between your last meal and bedtime
    • Evening habits that help you settle without overexhausting yourself
    • Protecting sleep quality, not just sleep quantity
    • A routine that helps your nights feel deeper and more restorative

  • The goal for a Black Bear is not just to sleep longer. It is to make sleep feel more effective. When your nights become deeper, steadier, and less disrupted, mornings usually start to feel much better.
  • Top 3 supplements that may fit this profile

    Glycine


    A strong fit when you fall asleep fairly well but your sleep does not feel deep, restorative, or refreshing by morning.

    Magnesium Glycinate or Bisglycinate


    A helpful foundational option when your body feels heavy, tense, or slow to fully relax into quality sleep.

    Reishi


    May be a good fit when the goal is deeper-feeling, more restorative sleep rather than simply knocking yourself out.

    Black Bear in one sentence

    If you are a Black Bear, your sleep issue is usually not just getting enough sleep — it is getting sleep that actually feels deep, restorative, and worth the hours you spent in bed.

    Important

    This page is for educational purposes only and is not medical advice. Talk to your doctor or pharmacist before taking any supplement. Do not use sleep supplements without medical guidance if you are pregnant or breastfeeding, taking prescription medications, taking blood thinners, or have kidney disease, seizures, bipolar disorder, sleep apnea, or another significant medical condition.