Night anxiety + scrolling is a brutal combo
I’ve done the whole “just one more scroll” thing at 1:17 a.m. too many times. And honestly, it never helps — it just makes my brain louder, my chest tighter, and my sleep worse.
So if your hand keeps reaching for your phone when you feel anxious at night, you’re not broken. You’re probably just trying to self-soothe with the easiest thing available. But scrolling is a trap — it gives your brain more input when it desperately needs less.
Here are 9 things to do instead of scrolling when anxiety hits after dark.
1) Put your phone across the room
This sounds stupidly simple, but it works.
If your phone is next to your pillow, you’ll pick it up. If it’s across the room, you have a tiny pause — and that pause is everything. I started charging mine on the other side of the bedroom, and it cut my random scrolling by a ridiculous amount.
Do this tonight:
- Plug your phone in far from bed
- Turn on grayscale if you can
- Put a book or notebook where your phone usually is
And yes, you’ll still think about grabbing it. But now there’s friction. Friction is your friend.
2) Do a 5-minute brain dump
Anxious at night often means your brain is trying to hold 47 tabs open. So give it somewhere to put them.
Grab a notebook and write the mess down — work worries, random reminders, awkward thing you said in 2019, all of it. Don’t make it pretty. Don’t make it organized. Just get it out of your head and onto paper.
Try this format:
- What I’m worried about:
- What can wait until tomorrow:
- One thing I can do next:
I swear, this helps more than “just relax.” Which, by the way, is the least helpful advice ever.
3) Read something boring on purpose
Not exciting. Not thrilling. Not a “can’t-put-it-down” page-turner.
Pick something mildly dull — a physical book, a magazine, even a long article you already know the ending to. The goal is to calm your nervous system, not entertain it. My personal favorite is reading the same chapter over and over because my brain eventually gets bored enough to shut up.
Good options:
- Memoir chapters
- Light nonfiction
- Cookbooks
- Old magazines
- Poetry
And if you start rereading the same paragraph five times? Great. That means your brain is slowing down.
4) Try a 3-minute breathing reset
No, you do not need a perfect meditation setup and a candle named something like “midnight rain.” You just need your breath.
Here’s the one I use when my heart feels weirdly fast:
- Inhale for 4
- Hold for 4
- Exhale for 6
- Repeat for 3 minutes
The longer exhale matters. It tells your body, we are not being chased by a tiger.
If counting stresses you out, just make the exhale longer than the inhale. That’s enough.
5) Make a tiny “tomorrow list”
A lot of night anxiety is really tomorrow anxiety wearing a fake mustache.
So before bed, write down 3 things you need to remember for tomorrow. Not 12. Not your entire life plan. Just three. This keeps your brain from using the night shift to remind you at 2 a.m.
Examples:
- Reply to Priya by noon
- Buy milk
- Send dentist form
That’s it. Done is better than detailed.
6) Do a low-effort body reset
When anxiety shows up, your body holds it. Shoulders up. Jaw clenched. Stomach weird. Hands tense.
So move a little. Not a full workout — you’re not trying to become a motivational poster at midnight. Just do a few slow stretches or shake out your arms and legs for 30 seconds.
Quick reset routine:
- Roll shoulders back 10 times
- Stretch neck gently
- Touch toes or reach overhead
- Lie back down and notice what changed
I’m a big fan of the “reset, don’t perform” approach. You don’t need to earn sleep.
7) Use a calming sensory trick
And no, I don’t mean buying a $60 sleep gadget you’ll use twice.
Pick one sense and give it something soothing:
- Smell: lavender lotion, a clean pillow spray, tea steam
- Touch: soft blanket, weighted blanket, warm socks
- Sound: rain noise, fan, quiet playlist
- Sight: dim lamp, warm light only
The trick is to make your environment feel safe, not stimulating. I love using a warm blanket because it gives my brain something physical to focus on besides every embarrassing thing I’ve ever done.
8) Write a “worry parking lot”
This one is for the thoughts that won’t leave you alone.
Take a page and write one column titled Not now. Every time a worry pops up, write it there. You are not solving it tonight. You are parking it.
This is weirdly powerful because it tells your brain: I hear you, but you’re not driving right now.
You can even add a second column:
So instead of “I’m failing at everything,” it becomes “Review this tomorrow at 10 a.m.” Way less dramatic. Way more useful.
9) Set up a “night anxiety kit”
This is one of those things that feels extra until you try it. Then it feels obvious.
Make a small box or pouch with things that help you calm down when your brain starts acting feral at night. Mine would absolutely include a notebook, lip balm, earplugs, and a tea bag I forgot I owned.
Your kit could include:
- Notebook + pen
- A book
- Herbal tea
- Hand lotion
- Earplugs
- Tissues
- Sleep mask
And keep it by your bed. The point is to make the healthier choice easier than the scroll spiral.
A simple 10-minute night plan
If you want something easy to remember, use this:
- Put phone away
- Write 3 tomorrow tasks
- Do 3 minutes of breathing
- Stretch for 1 minute
- Read 5 pages
- Lights out
That’s it. No fancy routine. No 12-step wellness ritual. Just a repeatable sequence that tells your brain it’s safe to power down.
If anxiety at night is constant, pay attention
Sometimes night anxiety is occasional. Sometimes it’s your body waving a giant flag.
If you’re anxious most nights, not sleeping well for weeks, or having panic symptoms often, don’t just white-knuckle it. Talk to someone — a therapist, doctor, or mental health professional. You deserve support, not just more coping hacks.
And if your habits are making nights worse, that’s something you can actually track and change. A habit tracker like Trider (myhabits.in) can help you notice patterns — like whether late caffeine, doomscrolling, or skipping your wind-down routine is messing with your sleep.
The real goal isn’t perfect calm
It’s not “never feel anxious at night again.” That’s unrealistic, and honestly kind of annoying.
The real goal is to stop feeding the anxiety with scrolling and give your brain a better option. One small swap is enough to start. Then another. Then another.
So tonight, pick just one thing from this list and try it before you reach for your phone. And if you want a little structure to keep the habit going, give Trider a shot — it might be the nudge that finally helps your nights feel calmer.