Couple waking up refreshed in a calm, tidy bedroom with morning light
Gesundheit & Wohlbefinden

7-Day Challenge

Sleep Reboost

7 days of shared sleep habits — wake up better, together

7 days. One goal. Together.

Start Our Sleep Reboost
Poor sleep is quietly wrecking everything. Your energy, your patience with each other, your skin, your decision-making, your mood at 6pm. You probably both know you could sleep better — but sleep habits are notoriously hard to change alone. If one of you scrolls in bed, the other gets the light. If one of you stays up late, the other lies awake waiting. Sleep is a team problem, and it needs a team solution. This week you tackle it together — building a shared wind-down routine, removing the things that steal your rest, and finally waking up like two people who actually slept.

Your 7-Day
Journey

See exactly what happens — day by day.

You can't fix a sleep problem you haven't properly described. A shared sleep audit — without judgment — gives you both a clear picture of what's actually happening and what you're most disrupting for each other.

Mini-task Both of you write down: your typical bedtime, your typical wake time, a quality score (1-10), and your top 2 sleep disruptors. Then compare notes. Are you on the same schedule? Is one of you a screen-scroller? Does the other one's alarm wake you both? Name the patterns before you try to change them. 15 min

Blue light from screens suppresses melatonin for up to two hours after exposure. It's not just willpower — your phone is literally making it harder for your brain to shift into sleep mode. Tonight you both put them down.

Mini-task From 9pm tonight, both phones go face-down or in another room. Fill the hour before bed with something else: talk, read a book, do a puzzle, make tea, stretch lightly. Notice: does the hour feel uncomfortable at first? That discomfort is the habit breaking. Send each other one last message before 9pm — then nothing until morning. 60 min

Your bedroom is supposed to be a sleep sanctuary — cool, dark, calm, and associated only with sleep and rest. For most people it's also a TV room, a phone-charging station, and a laundry depository. Today you fix that.

Mini-task Together, spend 20 minutes: remove all screens from the bedroom (or at minimum put them outside charging reach), close the blinds fully, clear any clutter from the bed and immediate surfaces, lower the room temperature if possible (17-19°C is optimal for sleep). Stand at the doorway and assess: does this room feel like rest? Adjust until it does. 20 min

Your body doesn't switch from "on" to asleep like a light switch. It needs a transition period — signals that it's safe to slow down. Building a shared 20-minute wind-down ritual gives your nervous system exactly what it needs.

Mini-task Design a 20-minute bedtime ritual together that you both actually want to do. Options: herbal tea together, gentle stretching or joint yoga, reading side by side, a short conversation about the best moment of the day, light journaling. Run through it tonight and rate how natural it felt. Adjust tomorrow. 25 min

Caffeine has a half-life of 5-7 hours. That afternoon coffee at 4pm is still half-active in your system at 10pm when you're lying in bed wondering why your brain won't stop. Today you cut the afternoon caffeine — both of you.

Mini-task Both of you: no coffee, tea, energy drinks, or caffeinated soft drinks after 2pm today. Replace the afternoon hit with water, herbal tea, or a short walk. At bedtime, compare energy levels: did the afternoon slump come? How did you handle it? Was the evening different? Take notes — this data is useful. 5 min

Eating late keeps your digestive system active during the hours your body most needs to repair and recover. An early dinner — before 7pm — gives your system a longer run-up to real, deep sleep.

Mini-task Plan and eat dinner together before 7pm today. It doesn't need to be a big meal — a lighter early dinner is actually better for sleep than a heavy one. At bedtime, note your sleep quality score. Compare it to day 1's baseline. Is there a difference? Many people are surprised. 30 min

You've tested six sleep interventions this week. You have data. Now you build a permanent shared sleep system from what actually worked — one that fits your real life, not a perfect hypothetical.

Mini-task Sit down together and review: Which nights did you sleep best? What was different about them? Choose 2-3 changes from this week that you both want to keep permanently. Write them as a shared agreement — "Our sleep rules." Pin them somewhere you'll see them. Tonight: run your full wind-down ritual and celebrate making it to day 7. 20 min
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Your Days 4–7 Are Waiting

Start your challenge on WhatsApp to unlock the full 7-day journey — guided, personal, and completely free to begin.

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What You’ll Both Walk
Away With

Real results. Not just feelings.

🌙

Deeper, More Restorative Sleep

Small, consistent sleep hygiene changes compound quickly. By day 5 most couples report noticeably deeper sleep and fewer night-time wake-ups.

☀️

Better Mornings for Both of You

When you both sleep better, mornings shift from rushed and foggy to calm and ready. The quality of your morning is determined the night before.

More Energy Across the Whole Day

Good sleep is the single most impactful health change you can make. Energy, mood, immunity, skin, cognitive performance — all improve when you sleep well consistently.

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Better Relationship Patience

Sleep deprivation directly increases conflict and irritability in couples. When you both sleep better, you're kinder, more patient, and more present with each other.

Why This Works Better Than
Without Support

Doing It Alone
With CHAIVARA
× You decide to put your phone down earlier — but your partner keeps scrolling next to you and the light makes it impossible.
Both phones go down together at 9pm. The bedroom is dark for both of you. The rule applies equally.
× You try to build a wind-down routine but feel silly doing it solo, so it never becomes a real habit.
Your shared wind-down ritual becomes something you both look forward to — it's connection time, not just sleep prep.
× You change the bedroom environment but your partner keeps their habits, and nothing really sticks.
You redesign the sleep environment together and both commit to the same rules. No one undermines the system.
× After a week of trying, you go back to old habits because there's no structure keeping the change in place.
You close the week with written shared sleep rules — a mutual agreement that makes the changes permanent.

Questions About
This Challenge

Different schedules are common, especially if one of you works shifts or has different natural rhythms. This challenge doesn't require you to go to bed at the same time — it requires you to apply the same sleep hygiene practices regardless of when you sleep. The wind-down ritual, no-screens rule, and bedroom environment all apply to whichever schedule you're on. You can adapt the timing to your actual bedtime.

Night wakings for parenting are real and this challenge doesn't pretend otherwise. What you can control is the quality of the sleep you do get. A dark, cool bedroom, no late-night caffeine, and a calm wind-down routine all improve the depth of sleep in the hours you do sleep — which means you recover faster from the interruptions. Even parents with young children report meaningful improvement from these practices.

Yes, significantly. Alcohol makes you fall asleep faster but dramatically reduces deep sleep and REM sleep quality. You wake up feeling unrefreshed even after 8 hours. We don't make rules about alcohol in this challenge, but if you're noticing poor sleep quality and having a glass of wine most evenings, try one night without it and compare your sleep scores.

Yes — duration and quality are different things. Eight hours of poor-quality sleep (light sleep, frequent micro-wakings, disrupted REM) leaves you feeling worse than six hours of deep, uninterrupted sleep. This challenge specifically targets sleep quality, not just duration. The bedroom temperature, no-screens rule, and early dinner practices all increase the proportion of deep sleep you get.

This Is Made
for You Both If…

  • You both feel chronically tired no matter how many hours you sleep
  • One or both of you scroll in bed and you both know it's affecting your sleep
  • Your mornings feel rushed, foggy, and like you're always behind
  • You want one health change that positively affects everything else in your life

Voices From
Our Community

“I didn't realise how much my partner's phone light was affecting my sleep until we both put them down. Night 2 I slept through for the first time in months. We've kept the no-screens rule ever since and both of us wake up feeling like different people.”

★★★★★
Marie & Felix
Sleep Reboost · Dresden

“The wind-down ritual was the game changer for us. We make chamomile tea and do 10 minutes of stretching together every night now. It sounds simple but it's become the favourite part of our day. Sleep aside — it's just quality time.”

★★★★★
Klara & Ben
Sleep Reboost · Düsseldorf

“We were both convinced 8 hours was enough and we just "weren't morning people." This challenge showed us that the hours don't matter as much as what we were doing before them. Two weeks on, our mornings are completely different. Calmer, more energy, actually present at breakfast.”

★★★★★
Thomas & Lena
Sleep Reboost · Leipzig

Ready to take the first step? Your first message is completely free.

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How to Start
(Takes 10 Seconds)

Choose your support level and text SLEEP to our WhatsApp.

Light
9,99 €

Self-guided daily messages & structure

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49,99 €

Personal support + coaching calls

Your moment is now.

You’re only 7 days away from
feeling like you again.

Send us a quick message and we’ll help you get started — completely free, no commitment needed.

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Strong in your body. Clear in your mind. Free in your soul.