Sleep Daily 

For 4 Years I Blamed the Hot Flushes. The Real Reason I Couldn't Sleep Was Something No One Mentioned

By a Riley Jacobson - Sleep Daily reader contributor · Updated June 2026

 

For four years, I changed my sheets at 3am.

 

Every night. Soaked through. Hair stuck to my neck.

Then five minutes later, freezing.

 

I'm 51. And I hadn't had a real night's sleep in four years.

 

If you're waking up drenched at 3am, and you've been told it's "just menopause," please read this. Because a sleep doctor told me one thing that explained all four years.

 

And it was not what I expected.

 

I Tried Everything to Cool Down

I know you've tried most of it too.

 

I turned my bedroom into a meat locker. Thermostat at 64. My husband slept in a hoodie.

 

I bought the bamboo sheets. Then the "cooling" sheets. Then a cooling pad for the mattress.

 

I put a fan on my nightstand and pointed it at my face.

 

I had ice water by the bed every single night.

 

I cut wine. I cut spicy food. I cut caffeine completely.

At 2am once, I had a $1,000 cooling machine in my online cart. That's how desperate I was.

 

Some of it helped a little. But nothing stopped the soaking. Nothing stopped the 3am.

 

The heat always won.

"It's Just Menopause," They Said

I went to my doctor. I told her I was barely sleeping.

 

She said, "That's menopause. Keep your room cool. Maybe cut back on wine."

 

I sat in my car afterward and cried.

She made it sound like the weather. Something I just had to wait out. Buy a fan. Good luck.

 

I asked about hormones. She listed the risks and said we'd "keep an eye on it."

 

I left with nothing.

The Question That Changed Everything

A few months later, my sister dragged me to a sleep specialist. Not a hormone doctor. A sleep doctor. I almost canceled twice.

 

I told him everything. The 3am. The soaking. The four years.

 

He didn't look surprised. He asked me one question.

 

"When you wake up hot, were you hot all evening? Or fine until the middle of the night?"

 

Fine until the middle of the night, I said. I fall asleep okay. It's the 3am part.

 

He nodded. Then he explained the thing nobody had ever told me.

Here Is What Nobody Explained

He said deep sleep is not triggered by darkness. It is not triggered by being tired.

 

It is triggered by your body temperature dropping.

 

A small drop, about half a degree, is the signal your brain uses to fall into deep sleep. 

 

Your body does this by sending heat out through your hands and feet so your core can cool.

 

Then he said the part that made me put my hand over my mouth.

 

In menopause, that cooling system gets thrown off. Your body can't release the heat smoothly anymore. So instead of a small, clean drop, it overshoots and dumps all the heat at once.

 

That dump is the flush. The soak. The 3am.

 

So the night sweat was never the problem.

 

The night sweat was my body failing to do the one thing that lets you sleep deeply.

 

 The heat I was fighting was just the symptom.

Why the Fan Never Worked

This is the part that still gets me.

 

I spent four years and a small fortune cooling the room.

But the room was never the problem. My core couldn't make the drop.

 

You could put me in a freezer and it still wouldn't fix it. I was treating the air around me. The signal was inside me.

 

That's why nothing worked. 

 

Every single thing I bought was aimed at the wrong place.

The Thing He Told Me to Look For

I asked him, almost angry by now, "Then what actually helps?"

 

He told me about an amino acid that does what the body is failing to do on its own.

 

It increases blood flow to your hands and feet. It pulls heat away from your core. It helps your temperature drop the smooth way it's supposed to.

 

It's called glycine. Your body already makes it.

 

He said the research for sleep is genuinely good. It helps you reach deep sleep faster and wake up more rested. Not by knocking you out. By helping your body cool the way it used to.

 

I had never heard of it. Four years of reading about menopause at 2am, and never once saw the word.

 

He said most people haven't, because glycine is cheap and can't be patented. 

 

Nobody runs ads for it. The money is in hormones and cooling gadgets.

The Product I Finally Found

I went looking for glycine at the dose in the research the full 3 grams. Not a tiny pinch hidden in a "blend."

That's how I found SNUGZ.

 

It's a melatonin-free gummy built around the real clinical dose. Here's what's in it:

  • 3g glycine — the temperature signal and the brakes, in one
  • Magnesium Glycinate — the highly-absorbed form, so it actually reaches the receptors that tell your nervous system it's safe to stop
  • Saffron — for the pathway that keeps a wired mind switched on at night
  • Apigenin — for the deep wind-down
  • L-Theanine — for the racing mind that monitors instead of rests

No melatonin. No synthetic hormones. No sedatives.

 

Every dose printed right on the bag.

 

Their line is "Not a sleeping pill. A sleep signal." It was the first sleep ad I'd ever read that matched the actual science.

I ordered it that night.

The First Morning

I'll be honest. After four years, I had no hope left. I took two and expected nothing.

 

I woke up and it was light outside.

 

I lay there confused, like something was missing. Then I realized. The sheets were dry. I hadn't woken at 3am. I hadn't done the math.

 

It wasn't a fluke. It kept happening. I won't lie and say it's perfect. But the soaking nights went from every night to maybe one a week. And the 3am spiral mostly just stopped.

 

The first morning I woke up truly rested, I sat on the edge of the bed and cried again. A different kind of crying.

If This Sounds Like You

If you're the woman changing her sheets at 3am. If you've been told it's "just menopause." If you've spent a fortune cooling a room that was never the problem.

 

It might not be the heat. It might be what the heat is telling you: that your body can't make the temperature drop deep sleep depends on.

 

SNUGZ comes with a money-back guarantee. If you don't notice a difference, you don't pay.

 

So there are really only two choices.

 

You can keep cooling the room, the way I did for four years.

 

Or you can finally help the signal underneath it.

 

Heres a link to check them out

 

Check SNUGZ availability here

 

Stock note: glycine at the clinical 3g dose is harder to source than melatonin, so SNUGZ does sell out. Worth checking the link before it does.

If you wake at 3am soaked through, then freezing five minutes later.

If you've turned the bedroom cold, bought the cooling sheets, and still can't stay asleep.

If you've been told it's "just menopause" and handed a fan.

If you've spent a fortune cooling the room and the heat still wins every night…

… What's missing isn't another way to cool the room. It's the one signal your body stopped sending: the core-temperature drop that deep sleep depends on.

 

CHECK SNUGZ AVAILABILITY & COOL FROM THE INSIDE

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