Crafting Your Optimal Morning Ritual: Insights from Andrew Huberman
Your first hour sets the neurochemical tone for everything that follows. Huberman explains the light, caffeine, and cold protocols that align your circadian clocks and sustain clarity through the day.
Video·After Skool·10 min read·June 2026
Andrew Huberman on the neuroscience behind morning light, caffeine timing, and cold exposure — and why the rituals you build in the first hour shape everything that follows.
Sleep and the Circadian Foundation
Every pursuit of better performance begins at the same foundation. Whether the goal is sharper focus, faster recovery, or metabolic efficiency, the substrate is always the same: sleep and what researchers call non-sleep deep rest. These are not optional enhancements; they are the baseline from which every other capacity grows. Without them, metabolism falters, immunity degrades, and the cognitive edge that defines performance becomes impossible to sustain.
Perfection is not the target. Consistent, high-quality sleep across roughly eighty percent of nights is the realistic standard — one that allows for real life without sacrificing the pattern that matters. A single difficult night does not erase your capacity. The body is more resilient than that. What erodes performance is the cumulative deficit, the slow drift that builds when recovery becomes an afterthought.
Understanding why that drift matters requires a brief encounter with biology. Every cell in your body carries its own circadian clock — a genetic program running on a twenty-four-hour rhythm. Your gut, your prefrontal cortex, your adrenal glands: each one is keeping its own time, regulated by the same underlying genes. When these clocks align, the body operates with a precision that governs hormone release, immune response, and cognitive clarity.
When those clocks fall out of sync, you feel it immediately. Jet lag is the clearest example — the gut goes off, thinking blurs, mood shifts without an obvious cause. These are not inconveniences; they are the measurable signature of a system operating without a shared reference point. Clock-alignment failures are predictable, and once understood, largely preventable.
The morning is where alignment is won or lost. The first hour after waking is not a warm-up; it is a calibration window. The signals you deliver in those sixty minutes either synchronize your body's millions of clocks to a single shared rhythm or allow them to drift through the day in disarray. Every downstream process — cortisol timing, alertness, mood, hormonal output, the timing of sleep itself — traces back to what happens here.
This is why the morning deserves precision, not urgency. Not a rigid protocol executed under pressure, but deliberate attention to the inputs that your body's timing systems are already waiting for. Give them the right signal at the right time, and the rest of the day falls into a rhythm that feels less effortful to inhabit.
hello and welcome to a special episode of after skool i'm andrew huberman professor of neurobiology and ophthalmology at stanford school of medicine i'm also the host of the hubermann lab podcast a weekly podcast focused on science and science-based tools for everyday life today you're going to learn about practical tools for optimizing your morning routine so without further ado practical tools for optimizing your morning routine there are certain foundational behaviors do's and don'ts that set the stage for you to be better at everything so a lot of times people say how can i lift more focus better remember things better it's like well let's think about the foundation of that and that's always going to come back to two elements and that's sleep and what i call non-sleep deep rest so sleep is the fundamental practice or part of our 24-hour cycle where if you don't get it on a consistent basis you
are down regulating your ability to do everything right metabolism is screwed up immune system is screwed up etc etc however it is not the case if you get a one night's bad sleep or that if you're not sleeping perfectly that you can't perform well but let's talk about sleep and just because i think it's important the goal for most people unless you're pulling vampire shifts on on deployment or you're a shift worker and thank you shift workers we'll talk about shift work you should try and get really good sleep eighty percent of the time eight percent of the nights of your life the other twenty percent i hope you're not getting good sleep for good reasons that you enjoy but the point is that there are a couple things that you can do first of all every cell in your body has a circadian rhythm meaning every cell has a 24-hour circadian clock that's regulated by genes think of these your body is a bunch of millions of clock to need to align those clocks to a single time this is why when you travel overseas your gut goes off or it's more easy you more easily you get sick or uh your thinking isn't quite right the clocks aren't in
alignment they're not entrained as we say number one practice for everything sleep especially is try and get some natural light in your eyes within an hour of waking up if you wake up before the sun turn on a bunch of bright lights and then get sunlight in your eyes once it comes out if there's dense cloud cover there are still more photons light energy coming through that cloud cover than there are coming from artificial lights so try and get five to ten minutes without sunglasses outside in the morning once the sun is out most days if not all days this has an outsized effect on a number of things first of all it modulates the timing of what's called the cortisol pulse once every 24 hours you're going to get a boost in cortisol big spike in cortisol it's a healthy boost it sets your temperature rhythm in motion sets your level of alertness your level of focus and your mood you want that cortisol pulse to happen as early in the day as once what's triggering the cortisol pulse the cortisol pulse is naturally entrained by these genetic programs to happen once every 24 hours but light will anchor it to the period where you see bright light got it a late-shifted cortisol pulse
so imagine the kid that wakes up and spends the morning in bed or you spend the morning bedding you're texting or you're indoors and you're typing on the computer that's not enough light to accomplish what i'm talking about and then you go outside around noon or one you're in what's called the circadian dead zone which is the time in which light arriving at the eyes can do certain things but it can't time this pulse that means that cortisol pulse is going to come in the afternoon which means that your temperature rhythm is going to be shifted late and that's actually a signature of depression and anxiety and difficulty falling asleep many people are waking up and they're just spending time indoors and they're putting on sunglasses getting in their car and driving or there's cloud cover and they think there's no sun out i don't mean that you actually have to stare at the sun never stare at any light so bright it's going to damage you please don't and blink as necessary but the indirect rays from the from sun trigger these cells in the eyes called melanopsin ganglion cells these ganglion cells these are our neurons they send a signal to your hypothalamus then the hypothalamus releases this peptide which is a wake-up signal for your whole brain and body
and sets a timer for the onset of melatonin release 16 hours later melatonin being the hormone that makes you sleepy and makes you want to go to sleep so you can imagine what happens if you don't get that light until a few hours later everything shifted and then you want to go to st you don't know why you're wide awake at 11 30 or 12 and everything's messed up the other thing is that you can get bright light from electronic devices early in the day but it's not enough you need photons from sunlight now if you live in scandinavia in the depths of winter if you're up in like you know trondheim or ohus or something like okay fine don't buy an expensive daytime simulator get one of these led light boxes for drawing they're very inexpensive in comparison you find them on amazon i don't have a relationship to any of these brands but they're easy to find 20 30 bucks put that on your desk and just look at that thing for a few minutes in the morning not as good but better than being in the darkness then when the sun's out get outside now this is a huge huge effect for the following reason the signal that arrives from the eyes to
the hypothalamus also triggers the release of the neuromodulator dopamine we hear about dopamine as a feel-good molecule dopamine dopamine dopamine dopamine hits but dopamine's main role in the brain and body is to drive motivation craving and pursuit it is not the molecule of pleasure it is the molecule of drive it is life force dopamine is actually the molecule from which adrenaline epinephrine is manufactured and you may notice you said we crave sun it also does make you feel good here's why if you think about seasonally breeding animals let's think about the arctic fox well the arctic fox in winter is white but in the summertime has darker pellets it actually there's a pathway going from sunlight to dopamine to melanin production in the skin in fur so animals that transition from light color to dark color that's all mediated by dopamine guess what else happens the gonads grow there are animals that i've worked on in the laboratory and that
also in humans it's now been shown in a beautiful study that people who get 20 to 30 minutes of light on their skin this was a study done in israel so they wear an appropriate amount of clothing but they're sleeveless no hat no sunglasses they were told to go outside 20 or 30 minutes three times a week just in the sunshine ideally they were shorts also they measure testosterone and estrogen in men and women significant increases in both and all the associated things of increased passion blah blah blah that is what they measured in the study why well it turns out that light to the eyes but also light to the skin the skin is an endocrine organ it's not just something to tattoo and hang earrings from and put clothing on and actually there's a pathway involving a molecule called p53 and the keratinocytes are these skin cells that when sunlight when uvb ultraviolet blue light penetrates the skin because it can penetrate the skin superficially triggers these keratinocytes to stimulate a pathway that releases dopamine in the brain and body so you feel better when you're getting light in your eyes and on your skin and you're increasing testosterone and epinephrine and dopamine increase that's
why you feel good in the summer months people in scandinavia know this this kind of spring fever in the winter months you want to go through every bit of effort to double or triple the amount of time that you're spending outside in the morning so instead of 10 minutes make it 30 minutes we all are familiar with getting sleepy and falling asleep that's the parasympathetic nervous system taking over the longer we are awake the longer the buildup of something called adenosine in the brain and body and adenosine turns on the parasympathetic nervous system suppresses the sympathetic nervous system when we sleep adenosine is pushed back down what is caffeine caffeine effectively through some chemical steps blocks the effects of adenosine so if you wait so here's a little trick if you that's i don't like the word hacks because hacks imply using something for a purpose it wasn't designed for here we're talking about hardwired biology but if you wake up in the morning and you didn't sleep quite as much as you would have liked that means and you're sleepy that means you still have a buildup of
adenosine in your system let's say you immediately reach for caffeine great you suppress the action of that adenosine and you will be more alert and guess what happens then the caffeine wears off and the adenosine binds to the receptors with greater affinity and you have your afternoon crash so a practice that's very useful to people is to delay the intake of caffeine by 60 to 90 minutes after waking allow the adenosine to be cleared out because it's not just cleared out in sleep it's also cleared out in those kind of sleepy states of early morning so allow it to be cleared out the other thing that clears it out exercise exercise so when you get up in the morning you're kind of sleepy i don't want to do this i don't want to do this but you hydrate and train you clear out the adenosine now i like to drink caffeine before i train her during training i'm weak like that but for people that have an afternoon crash this can have tremendous benefits of and maybe start by pushing it out 15 minutes per day most everyone that does this says oh my goodness i didn't understand why in the afternoon i'm crashing so hard this will really really help
so let me ask you this i have a sense for you what time do you wake up typically generally between well between 4 15 and 4 30. okay so for most people it's gonna be a little bit later probably but for you that means so you're waking up if it's because of an alarm it's because of an alarm but you're if that's your natural wake-up time now without an alarm that means that your temperature is starting to rise at that time that's why you wake up that temperature increase triggers that cortisol release now and that's why some people wake up right before their alarm clock it's this cortisol pulse okay and two hours before that so for you approximately 2 30 in the morning is what we call your temperature minimum it's when your temperature is lowest that it's ever going to be in the 24 hour cycle so the way it works is you wake up because of an increase in core body temperature that increase in core body temperature triggers that increase in cortisol and by viewing
light at that time you entrain you you ensure that it happens at the same time the next day the clocks of your body are matched to this cortisol pulse so viewing bright light in the morning anchors it when we say entrained it it tel through a circuit that involves cells in the eye and cells in the hypothalamus which then talk to the rest of the cells of the body through a signal a peptide that's released make sure that the temperature starts rising goes up up up up up and sometime around two or three in the afternoon you're going to hit your temperature maximum you might feel a little sleepy at that time but that's actually the time in which your gut your all your systems are kind of revving at the maximum capacity and then it's going to start to drop and start to drop drop drop now that drop in temperature eventually will be a full one to 3 degrees below what your temperature maximum and that's when you're going to get sleepy and fall asleep this is why it's important to keep the room cool at night to fall asleep the goal here is to increase body temperature in order to be awake and to decrease body temperature
in order to be asleep if we stay with those themes a lot of this will just fall into bins exercising will increase body temperature somewhat paradoxically getting into a cold shower or cold water everyone says what must make you cold right well if you stay in there a long time to become hypothermic right but let's remember the thermostat example you have a little area in your brain called the medial pre-optic area and if you make the surface of your body cold guess what happens core body temperature goes up so getting into so if you're going to do ice baths or cold showers you can do i would say do them sometime better than not at all there's a beautiful paper published in the european journal physiology in the year 2000 which took people and had them sit they actually had them on lawn chairs in water a pool it's a great way to run an experiment i always say people ask about cold showers they're not a lot of experiments on cold showers because think about it's very hard to control is everyone under the shower the same way et cetera you put someone up in water up to their neck it is you know what you're doing so there's it's experimental rigor that drives that but they had people get into reasonably
cool water 60 degrees fahrenheit so it's not that cool but they had them stand for an hour or they've had people get into very cold water something like 40 degrees for just 20 seconds now here's what's really interesting that shock that you referred to is a adrenaline also called epinephrine and it is released from the adrenals obviously but also from a site in the brain called locus ceruleus a little area of the brainstem that then sprinklers the rest of the brain with epinephrine and wakes up the rest of the brain so that shock occurs in the brain and the body and actually the stuff in the body doesn't cross the blood-brain barrier so you're a two-part system when those two systems are aligned it's beautiful when those two systems are out of alignment that's not good so you get into cold water that's the shock for the first 30 seconds for most people who are untrained your forebrain which is controlling decision making is basically suppressed in its activity and other areas are ramped up so just know that exact panic just understand that passes
then what happens is when you get out of the cold whether or not it's a longer period at 60 degrees or a short period i would hate to hear that people are only doing 20 seconds but maybe a minute to three minutes at 45 degrees or something there's a long arc release of dopamine and epinephrine that's what was shown in the study in humans because people always go well it's just in mice no in humans and that long arc of dopamine leads to a near doubling or more of dopamine and epinephrine in my colleague anna lembke's book called dopamine nation she works on addiction runs our dual diagnosis addiction clinic at stanford she talked about a patient of hers that basically helped himself get over cocaine addiction by doing cold baths because it was the only thing that would give him the kind of dopamine release that even slightly mimicked his cocaine addiction and allowed himself to wean himself off with a healthier behavior now i'm not saying it's the equivalent of a drug like cocaine but i am saying that it's a better decision than than a drug like cocaine for obvious reasons so that mood-enhancing effect that you feel afterwards it's real
it's based on a real neurochemical effect and that dopamine and epinephrine will combine with the temperature increase from cortisol plus light plus exercise all things that increase core body temperature now you've got increased core body temperature you created a dopamine release epinephrine you've created a summer month inside your body in the in i don't care if you live in minneapolis in the depths of winter or someplace even as cold as new hampshire you are you are creating summer in your body by doing that now if you live in san diego or los angeles or arizona and it's the summer and you're staying indoors and you're on your phone and you're not doing any movement until the afternoon which is fine exercise in the afternoon i realize there's some important benefits of that and you're laying in bed or you're just walking around the kitchen and putting on sunglasses and driving to work guess what you're creating a colorado winter inside of your body despite the fact that the sun is out so if you're wondering why you're slightly depressed your metabolism is lower your testosterone output is slightly lower than maybe
you'd like it to be there could be other reasons too of course but again we're talking about modulators i'm not saying getting sun in your eyes in the morning is going to make your testosterone perfect what i'm saying is you're you're setting an internal milieu through things that increase core body temperature dopamine epinephrine etc and that should be done relatively early in the day thank you for joining for this special episode of after skool if you'd like to learn more tools for mental health physical health and performance check out the huberman lab podcast which is available on all platforms youtube apple spotify anywhere podcasts are found also check out huberman lab on both instagram and twitter there i cover science and science-based tools some of which overlaps with the content of the huberman lab podcast but much of which is distinct from the content of the huberman lab podcast we are also hubermanlab.com that's our website and there you can find links to all of our social media and all of our podcast episodes
Transcript auto-generated by YouTube. Verbatim — duplicates intentionally preserved.
The First Practice: Morning Light
The single most powerful input you can give your circadian system costs nothing and takes less than ten minutes. Get outside within an hour of waking — five to ten minutes, no sunglasses, most days. This practice sets every other process in motion, and its simplicity is almost misleading given the depth of physiology it initiates.
The instinct to skip this step on overcast mornings is understandable and mistaken. Dense cloud cover filters light dramatically by human perception, but the photon load reaching your eyes outdoors still exceeds what any indoor artificial source can replicate. The body's timing systems evolved under an open sky and require that intensity. Go outside anyway.
Inside the eye, a specialized class of neurons — melanopsin-containing retinal ganglion cells — are tuned specifically to broad-spectrum, high-intensity light. These are not standard photoreceptors. They project directly to the hypothalamus, the brain's master regulator of hormonal timing, body temperature, and sleep architecture. When morning light activates them, they carry a signal that arrives in the hypothalamus as a coordinated wake-up broadcast for the entire system.
That signal triggers the day's cortisol pulse — a single, healthy surge that sets your temperature rhythm ascending, sharpens alertness, and stabilizes mood. The timing of this pulse is not incidental. When it arrives early, anchored to the actual morning, every downstream process runs on schedule: temperature rises steadily, peaks in early afternoon, then descends in the precise arc that eventually makes sleep possible.
A late-shifted cortisol pulse changes everything. The person who spends the morning indoors — in bed with a phone, at a desk under fluorescent light — and finally steps outside around noon receives their cortisol pulse in what is called the circadian dead zone. Light arriving at this hour can accomplish many things, but it cannot anchor this particular timer. The pulse arrives late, the temperature rhythm shifts, and the physiological state that follows is identical to patterns documented in depression, anxiety, and chronic sleep difficulty. This is not metaphor; it is measurable biology.
Morning light also initiates a countdown. That first outdoor exposure starts a sixteen-hour timer for melatonin release — the hormone of biological readiness for sleep. When the morning signal fires on time, melatonin arrives on time, and sleep comes when the day is complete. Delay the morning signal, and you delay everything downstream: the ease of falling asleep, the depth of rest, the recovery the following morning depends on.
For those in climates where winter light is genuinely scarce — high latitudes, overcast regions, weeks when the sun rises after your alarm — a simple LED light panel provides a meaningful substitute. It is not equivalent to an open sky, but it is categorically superior to standard indoor lighting. Use it in the early morning while the sun is absent, then step outside the moment conditions allow.
How Sunlight Shapes Dopamine and Hormones
The hypothalamic signal triggered by morning light does more than set the cortisol clock. It initiates a cascade of neuromodulatory release — and at the center of that cascade is dopamine. Not dopamine as the pleasure reward you feel after achieving something, but dopamine as the force that propels you toward achievement in the first place. Dopamine is the molecule of motivation, of pursuit, of sustained forward drive; this distinction matters more than the word itself.
It is not the molecule of pleasure. It is the molecule of drive. It is life force.
Dopamine is also the direct biochemical precursor to epinephrine — adrenaline — the molecule of alertness and physical energy. When morning light triggers dopamine release, it builds the neurochemical foundation from which the day's clarity and focus emerge. The lift you feel on a bright morning is not incidental; it traces directly to a circuit running from the eye to the hypothalamus to the systems that govern drive and vitality.
The pathway extends beyond the eye. The skin is an endocrine organ — not simply a surface to clothe and protect, but an active participant in hormonal signaling. UVB light penetrating the skin triggers keratinocytes through a molecular pathway involving a protein called p53, producing a dopamine release in the brain. Sunlight on skin is a physiological signal the body translates into neurochemical activity — not merely warmth.
Research conducted with human subjects confirms this connection. Participants who spent twenty to thirty minutes outdoors in direct sunlight — sleeveless, without hats or sunglasses, three times per week — showed significant increases in both testosterone and estrogen. The hormonal response to sunlight exposure is not an artifact of animal studies; it is reproducible and grounded in the same dopamine-mediated pathways that govern motivation and drive.
The inverse is equally instructive. Spending a clear, sunny morning entirely indoors — in artificial light, delaying outdoor exposure until afternoon — creates a significant internal mismatch. Dopamine falls below its potential. Epinephrine output diminishes. Hormonal levels settle where they would in the depths of winter. The body registers the photon deficit and responds accordingly: lower drive, quieter mood, metabolism running below what it could sustain.
The difference between a summer morning and a winter one, in neurochemical terms, is not the temperature outside. It is the light you give your body access to. Choose sunlight, and the body responds with chemistry that feels like summer — the drive, the hormonal output, the clarity that people associate with warmer months. That is entirely within your control.
Caffeine Timing and Cold Exposure
Sleepiness is not a character flaw; it is chemistry. A molecule called adenosine accumulates in the brain throughout every waking hour, suppressing the sympathetic nervous system and eroding alertness — the progressive biological signal that builds toward rest. Caffeine does not clear this accumulation; it blocks adenosine's receptors, masking the sleepiness signal while the underlying chemistry remains unchanged. When caffeine clears, adenosine binds those receptors with greater force. This is the afternoon crash — predictable, and entirely preventable.
Delaying your first caffeine by sixty to ninety minutes after waking changes the equation. In those early morning minutes before caffeine intervenes, the body naturally clears adenosine — not as efficiently as during sleep, but meaningfully. Allowing that process to proceed before introducing caffeine means working with a cleaner neurochemical baseline. The result is more sustained alertness through the day and a significantly diminished afternoon crash.
You are creating summer in your body.
Exercise compounds this effect. Movement in the morning accelerates adenosine clearance and raises core body temperature — which is itself a powerful entrainment signal. Temperature rising, adenosine clearing, cortisol anchored by morning light: these processes reinforce one another. Together they establish an internal environment defined by clarity and readiness that does not depend on additional stimulants to maintain.
Cold exposure belongs in this sequence, though not for the reason intuition suggests. When cold reaches the skin's surface, an area of the brain called the medial pre-optic area detects the drop and drives core body temperature upward in response. A cold shower or a brief plunge does not undermine the morning's warming protocol — it accelerates it. The thermoregulatory response to cold is a paradox that works precisely in your favor.
The neurochemical effect of cold exposure extends the morning's dopamine architecture. Human studies have documented a sustained release of dopamine and epinephrine following cold water immersion — a long arc of elevated mood and drive lasting well beyond the exposure itself. The increase approaches a near-doubling of baseline levels. This is not the sharp spike and rapid fade of a stimulant; it is a durable elevation that supports focus, clarity, and resilience for hours.
Stacked together — morning light, movement, and cold — these practices create an internal environment independent of latitude or season. The person navigating January in Minneapolis and the person in a San Diego summer can access the same neurochemical milieu: elevated dopamine and epinephrine, rising core temperature, cortisol anchored by light, and a sixteen-hour sleep countdown already running on time. The protocol is deliberate. The physiology responds accordingly. This is what a well-constructed morning ritual produces — not a checklist completed under pressure, but a foundation that makes everything that follows easier to inhabit with clarity and purpose.