4. Protect your sleep
Sleep often gets treated like a bonus, but with diabetes, it is basic care. Getting enough sleep may improve mood, energy, and blood glucose levels. Better sleep can make the rest of your routine feel more manageable, too. The American National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK) advises aiming for about seven to eight hours a night, and the CDC notes that poor sleep habits can make blood sugar harder to manage and may leave you feeling more worn down.
Poor sleep can also leave you feeling hungrier, more irritable, and less motivated to stay on track with other healthy habits. That is why rest matters so much. Protecting your sleep is not being lazy; it is one more way of taking good care of yourself.
Small changes can help more than people think: keep a regular bedtime, make your room dark and cool, and leave phones or TVs outside the bedroom when possible. A calmer night can make the next day’s food choices, energy, and glucose management feel less chaotic.