If you wake up exhausted, you’re not alone. Especially in Cyprus!

You went to bed at a reasonable hour. You clocked a full eight hours. And yet the alarm goes off, you surface from a vivid dream, and your body feels like it’s been dragged into the horror of a new day against its will.

But it’s not because you’re bad at sleeping. This grogginess has a name – and it has nothing to do with laziness. It’s called sleep inertia. And, in Cyprus, it’s almost built into daily life.

A recent article on our island’s night-time habits suggests many of us on the island aren’t sleeping dramatically less than elsewhere. But our sleep IS more broken, more irregular and more vulnerable to disruption from lifestyle and environment. (Particularly in Paphos, where well-educated, middle-aged women reported the poorest sleep quality on the island!)

Sleep doesn’t happen in one long, flat stretch. It moves in cycles – usually lasting around 90 minutes – shifting between lighter sleep, deeper sleep, and REM (the dreaming stage).

When you wake naturally at the end of a cycle, you tend to feel clearer and more refreshed. When an alarm drags you out mid-cycle, the result is sleep inertia: heavy limbs, foggy thinking and that overwhelming urge to hit snooze.

Modern life makes this worse. Alarms, screens, artificial light and irregular schedules constantly interrupt the body’s internal clock – the circadian rhythm – which is designed to sync with light, darkness and routine.

And Cyprus, for all its sunshine, is very good at knocking that rhythm off course.

We eat late. Social life runs into the evening. Summer nights stay bright and warm long after the body expects darkness. Winter mornings can still feel dim. Add in night-time noise – traffic, dogs, neighbours, the occasional early-morning bin lorry – and even a full night’s sleep can feel fragmented.

This helps explain a common frustration: why weekend lie-ins don’t fix Monday fatigue. Sleeping late on Saturday and Sunday may feel like recovery, but it can actually deepen the problem by shifting your body clock even further out of sync – a phenomenon researchers call ‘social jet lag’.

The result? You may be spending enough time in bed, but waking at the wrong moment, again and again.

The good news is that this isn’t a personal failure. It’s biology.

Research shows that consistency matters more than perfection when it comes to sleep. Regular wake-up times help anchor the body clock, while exposure to natural morning light helps signal that the day has begun – gently nudging sleep cycles into a more predictable pattern.

This doesn’t mean turning island life upside down. It doesn’t require rigid bedtimes, expensive gadgets or obsessive tracking. Small shifts – steadier wake times, a little morning light, fewer sudden schedule swings – can make a noticeable difference over time.

Most importantly, it reframes the problem. If you wake up tired in Cyprus, it’s not because you’re doing sleep ‘wrong’. It’s because modern life here asks our bodies to run on a timetable they weren’t designed for.

And understanding that is the first step to easing the struggle. Because feeling good in Cyprus isn’t about sleeping longer – it’s about waking at the right moment.