Hazel Scott Shares Her Experience, Gives Advice on Sleep Routines for Busy Women

For Hazel Scott, sleep used to feel like a luxury. Between managing her marketing agency, raising two kids, and answering emails long past midnight, she was living on coffee and adrenaline. “I told myself I was fine,” she admits. “But I was really running on empty.”

It wasn’t until she fell asleep during a client presentation that she realized something had to change. Today, Hazel is a different person — calmer, more focused, and healthier — thanks to what she calls her “sleep renaissance.” Her journey offers practical guidance for millions of busy women trying to reclaim rest in a world that glorifies exhaustion.

“We’ve been taught that hustle equals success,” Hazel says. “But without sleep, success becomes survival.” At 36, she discovered that insomnia was not a sign of weakness but a signal from her body. When she finally listened, she realized that rebuilding her life meant rebuilding her nights.

The Crash: When Busyness Becomes Burnout

Hazel’s schedule looked normal from the outside — a 6 a.m. spin class, a school drop-off, nine hours of back-to-back meetings, and late-night emails. Inside, her nervous system was in constant overdrive. “I was tired but wired,” she explains. “I’d lie in bed scrolling my phone because I was too anxious to shut down.” She tried melatonin, lavender spray, and even sleep teas, but nothing worked for long.

After a routine check-up revealed elevated cortisol levels and chronic sleep debt, her doctor pointed her to research from the National Institutes of Health showing that insufficient sleep disrupts immune function, mood regulation, and hormonal balance. “Lack of sleep isn’t just feeling tired,” he warned. “It’s a physiological crisis.” That conversation shocked her into action. “I realized I’d never been taught how to rest,” she says. “So I decided to learn.”

Redefining Rest: What Sleep Really Means for Women

For many women, sleep is the first thing sacrificed to responsibility. According to a 2024 survey by the Sleep Foundation, women are 40 percent more likely than men to experience insomnia — especially during their 30s and 40s, when stress and hormone fluctuations peak. Hazel recognized herself in those statistics. “My brain never clocked out,” she says. “It was always planning the next day.”

Her first lesson was acceptance: you can’t out-think fatigue. “I used to treat sleep like a goal — something to optimize. Now I treat it like a relationship — something to nurture.” She started tracking her patterns with a smart watch and found that her average sleep time was barely 5 hours. No wonder she felt foggy and irritable. She made one small promise: to create a routine that respected her biology instead of fighting it.

Building a Routine That Actually Works

Hazel’s plan was simple but radical. She called it the “Reverse Morning Routine.” Instead of focusing on what to do after waking up, she focused on what to do before sleep. “The day starts the night before,” she explains. That meant turning off screens at 9 p.m., lowering lights, and creating rituals that signaled her brain it was safe to rest.

She experimented with several techniques from sleep experts and found a few that stuck:

    • 1. The 90-Minute Rule: Based on guidance from the Mayo Clinic, Hazel scheduled bedtime in 90-minute cycles to match her natural sleep architecture. “I set alarms not to wake up, but to wind down.”
    • 2. No Blue Light After Nine: She replaced doom-scrolling with an old-fashioned book and warm tea. “My anxiety dropped instantly.”
    • 3. Temperature Matters: Research from Harvard Health shows that cool rooms (around 65°F) improve deep sleep. She invested in breathable bamboo sheets and a fan. “It’s my cheap luxury.”
    • 4. Mind Dump Journaling: Before bed, she wrote down unfinished thoughts so they wouldn’t follow her to dreamland. “It’s like closing browser tabs in my head.”
    • 5. Magnesium and Melatonin Balance: Instead of high doses of melatonin, she opted for low dose magnesium glycinate — a calming mineral recommended by the Cleveland Clinic.

Within a month, her sleep improved dramatically. She went from five hours to seven and a half on average, and woke up without the dread she used to feel. “My mornings stopped feeling like punishment,” she says.

The Hormonal Connection Most Women Miss

As Hazel learned more, she discovered how deeply female hormones influence sleep. Fluctuations in estrogen and progesterone throughout the menstrual cycle affect body temperature and REM patterns. “I finally understood why I slept terribly right before my period,” she says. Studies from the National Library of Medicine confirm that premenstrual insomnia is common and often misdiagnosed as stress. Once she aligned her routine with her cycle — avoiding late-night work during high stress days and adding extra rest around her period — her energy stabilized.

She also discovered the link between nutrition and hormonal balance. “Cutting caffeine after 2 p.m. and adding foods rich in vitamin B6 and magnesium made a huge difference,” she notes. A study by the Harvard School of Public Health backs her up: magnesium supports melatonin production and relaxes muscles, aiding natural sleep onset.

Mindset Matters More Than Mattresses

The biggest change was mental. “For years, I saw sleep as lost time,” Hazel says. “Now I see it as investment time.” That shift transformed how she organized her days. She stopped multitasking late at night and started delegating more at work. “I realized rest was a leadership skill,” she smiles. Her team noticed too: meetings became shorter, decisions clearer, and creativity higher.

She credits mindfulness for making the routine stick. “Some nights my brain still races,” she admits. “When that happens, I breathe — four seconds in, six seconds out — until my body remembers peace.” Research from the Harvard Health Blog shows that mindfulness meditation can reduce insomnia symptoms by up to 50 percent in chronic cases. For Hazel, that was proof enough.

Lessons for Busy Women Everywhere

Hazel now shares her experience through workshops called “Rest as Rebellion.” Her message is simple but radical in today’s culture: “Rest is not a reward; it’s a requirement.” She encourages women to treat sleep like a non-negotiable meeting with their future selves.

Her key takeaways:

    • Prioritize wind-down time like you prioritize deadlines.
    • Keep your bedroom sacred — no work emails, no TV shows about murder.
    • Track your sleep cycle but don’t obsess over numbers.
    • Choose comfort over comparison; what works for influencers might not work for you.
    • Forgive yourself for bad nights — progress is in persistence.

“We can’t pour from an empty cup,” Hazel says. “Sleep fills the cup.” Now she protects her bedtime like a business appointment — because it is one, with herself. Her final reflection is soft but strong: “When I chose sleep, I chose to stay alive for my own life.”