5 simple habits that may improve your health, and the science behind them

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5 simple habits that may improve your health, and the science behind them

We have more health information and tools than any generation in history. And yet many of us go through the day tired, distracted, and feeling vaguely behind. 

LMNT interviewed Chris Williamson, host of the “Modern Wisdom” podcast, for insights. Once a self-described “obsessive productivity bro,” he’s spent the last eight years interviewing some of the smartest people on the planet about productivity, health, and self-improvement. The common thread to his conversations: Meaningful health shifts often come from reducing friction around simple habits, not elaborate routines.

Key points:

  • Small, repeatable behaviors are more likely to stick and create lasting health improvements than complex routines.
  • When a behavior fits naturally into your day, you’re far more likely to maintain it.
  • Basics like sleep, light exposure, hydration, and attention management have outsize effects relative to effort.

Why simple habits stick

Simple habits are more likely to stick than those requiring more planning and brainpower, according to one meta-analysis. This is certainly true when it comes to health:

  • One 2025 meta-analysis found that sedentary adults who break up the day with short bursts of vigorous movement like stair climbing or short cycling intervals saw improved cardiovascular fitness and lower LDL ('bad') cholesterol over several weeks to months.
  • A randomized trial found adults with metabolic syndrome who implemented small, repeatable habits — eating vegetables at meals, taking brisk walks, and pausing before reacting to stress or eating — were significantly more likely to achieve metabolic syndrome remission two years later than people who only received health education and an activity monitor.

The mechanisms seem to be automaticity and simplicity: Habits that don't require willpower are easier to repeat, and behaviors that repeat frequently are the ones more likely to shift metabolism, sleep, and energy levels over time.

It’s tempting to dismiss obvious advice like “eat more vegetables” as too simple to make a big difference. But the fundamentals keep resurfacing for a reason: They work.

Here are five high-impact habits you’ve likely heard of, but maybe don’t do, that Williamson swears by.

Sleep with your phone outside of your bedroom

“It’s the single cheapest, completely free lifestyle intervention that will instantly improve the quality of your life,” says Williamson.

Most people still sleep with their phone ever created within arm’s reach: 83% of U.S. adults surveyed by YouGov in May 2025 keep their smartphones in the bedroom, and 43% always or often check them within 10 minutes of falling asleep.

Phone use within 30 minutes of sleep is linked with delayed bedtimes, shortened sleep, and daytime drowsiness. Screen light — especially bright or prolonged exposure — can suppress melatonin, the hormone that signals it’s time to sleep.

Need help kicking your phone out of your bedroom? “Get a screen time app,” says Williamson. “From 7 a.m. till 8 p.m. you can use your phone, and then from 8 p.m. to 7 a.m., you can’t.” Think of it as intermittent fasting for your phone use.

Start the day with sun and movement

“My morning routine is to get up and walk. Fifteen minutes of sunlight in my eyes,” Williamson says. This strategy is shared by experts he’s interviewed, most notably neuroscientist Dr. Andrew Huberman, who suggests getting 5-10 minutes of morning sun on bright days and 15-20 minutes on overcast ones. Research links sun exposure before 10 a.m. with better sleep quality and more restorative sleep the next night.

Morning light also:

  • Helps regulate your cortisol awakening response — different from stress-driven cortisol spikes — which primes your memory and emotional regulation abilities for the day.
  • Anchors circadian rhythms — the internal clocks that regulate sleepiness and alertness — by suppressing melatonin.

If you take a stroll while soaking in the sun, you also lock in some movement. Even if you don’t get the recommended 7,000 steps, you’ve already done something that nudges your physiology in the right direction.

Use hydration as a force multiplier

"If I'm not sufficiently hydrated, my brain doesn't work well,” says Williamson.

Staying hydrated is crucial for energy, mental clarity, and mood support. Your brain runs on water and electrolytes. When you’re dehydrated, your hypothalamus increases production of the hormone vasopressin, a hormone that helps regulate the body’s water balance by signaling the kidneys to conserve water. That signal may be associated with increases in stress hormones like cortisol. Your brain measurably (but temporarily) shrinks to maintain fluid balance in the body. Neural activity becomes less efficient, meaning your brain has to work harder to maintain the same level of performance.

Even mild dehydration can sap your ability to sustain attention, research suggests. That’s a problem when you’re trying to form new habits because executive function, which involves attention, memory, and suppressing inhibition, is a driver of healthy behavior.

Mild to moderate dehydration of 1.5% to 3% loss in body mass also makes exercise feel significantly harder, according to a review in the Journal of Exercise Science & Fitness. Dehydration increases the rate of perceived exertion (RPE), making workouts feel harder than they otherwise would, which can lead to junk volume.

In some cases, water alone doesn’t always solve the problem. “Proper hydration isn't just about having sufficient fluids in your body,” says Williamson, who drinks electrolyte water in the morning and during podcast recordings. “It's having the electrolytes to allow your body to actually use the water that you consume."

An infographic listing the symptoms of electrolyte imbalance.
LMNT


Schedule phone-free breaks throughout the day

When your phone is always nearby, your nervous system rarely gets a break. Research suggests that constant notifications keep us in a state of anticipation for the next dopamine hit from a text, comment, or headline. And the mere presence of a phone can distract us from the benefits of in-person social interactions.

Research also shows that frequent phone use is associated with higher rates of depression, stress, anxiety, and sleep problems. It becomes a vicious cycle — problematic phone use contributes to mental health problems, and then people get more addicted to their phones as they use them in search of a quick mood boost.

Cutting back on smartphone time can reduce stress, steady your mood, and boost energy, not to mention tame the mental fatigue that comes from having too many things percolating in your mind.

Eat dinner earlier to sleep better

"Eating a good while before bed definitely seems to make me sleep better, so I'm pushing dinnertime earlier and earlier,” says Williamson.

If you’re working late or shuttling kids between activities, dinner can drift later than you’d like. But eating too close to bedtime may reduce sleep quality in a few ways:

  • Circadian disruption: Meal timing acts as a cue for our biological clocks that regulate sleep. We’re wired to feed during the day and fast at night.
  • Blood sugar elevation: Eating close to bedtime can keep blood sugar elevated when your body is preparing for rest.
  • Hormone shifts: Late meals also nudge hormones like cortisol and melatonin out of their usual rhythm.
  • Body temperature changes: Eating two to three hours before bed may also lead to a slight elevation in body temperature that could disrupt sleep, preliminary research suggests.

Over time, that can add up, with some studies suggesting late eating is associated with markers of inflammation and mood disturbance.

Meal timing should be whatever optimizes your sleep. That could mean a light, pre-bed snack, or it might mean a good three to four hours between dinner and bedtime. This is one of those places where you have to find what works for you — and your sleep quality is the feedback.

The takeaway

These strategies won’t win awards for novelty. They work because they align with basic physiology and remove unnecessary friction. In a culture obsessed with increasingly complex health hacks, there’s real power in simplicity. When sleep, light, hydration, meal timing, and attention are dialed in, everything built on top of them gets easier to sustain.

FAQs:

Q: Does eating late at night affect sleep?

It can. A study of 793 young adults found that eating within three hours of bedtime was associated with more nighttime awakenings. A larger population-based study found even stronger effects — eating within one hour of bedtime more than doubled the odds of waking after sleep onset. A good starting point: Aim for three hours between your last meal and bed, then adjust based on how you sleep. It can take a little experimenting to find what’s right for you.

Q: Can dehydration cause brain fog?

Yes, and it doesn't take much. A meta-analysis of 33 studies found that dehydration impairs attention, executive function, and motor coordination. Fluid losses as small as 1%-2% of body weight can impair focus and working memory, and contribute to anxiety and tension.

Q: How long should I spend in morning sunlight?

Aim for 10 to 30 minutes of outdoor light within the first few hours of waking. A 2025 study of over 1,700 adults found that every 30-minute increment of morning sun exposure was associated with improved sleep quality. The mechanism: Morning light sets your circadian clock, triggering a countdown to melatonin release roughly 12-16 hours later. Earlier light exposure means earlier, more predictable melatonin onset — and better sleep.

This story was produced by LMNT and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.

Originally published on science.drinklmnt.com, part of the BLOX Digital Content Exchange.

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