Femphases

Sleep Disturbance Tracker

Sleep Disturbance Tracker

Track your sleep patterns and understand how they affect your daily well-being.

Q1. How would you rate your sleep overall last night?
Q2. How long did it take you to fall asleep?
Q3. Did you wake up during the night?
Q4. If you woke up, were you able to fall back asleep easily?
Q5. Did hot flashes or night sweats disturb your sleep?
Q6. Did stress, worry, or a racing mind make it harder to sleep?
Q7. How rested did you feel when you woke up?
Q8. How much did your sleep affect your day today?

Some nights you fall asleep easily and wake feeling rested. Other nights, you lie awake, wake up repeatedly, feel too hot, or get up in the morning feeling as though you barely slept at all.

When hormones are shifting, sleep can change in frustrating ways. Sometimes it is difficult to fall asleep. Sometimes it is waking in the night. Sometimes it is poor-quality sleep that leaves you tired, foggy, and unlike yourself the next day.

This simple tracker is here to help you notice patterns, understand what may be affecting your sleep, and feel more aware of what your body may be telling you.

You do not need to track perfectly. A quick daily check-in is enough.

Sleep problems are common during menopause and can be linked with night sweats, anxiety, and other menopause symptoms.

What is this tracker for?

Sleep changes can happen for many reasons, including stress, poor sleep habits, life pressure, anxiety, hot flashes, and hormonal changes. During perimenopause and menopause, many women notice that sleep becomes lighter, more broken, or less refreshing than it used to be.

This tracker is not here to diagnose a sleep disorder. It is here to help you notice patterns gently and clearly, so you can better understand what may be affecting your rest over time.

Why tracking matters

When sleep is poor, everything can feel harder. You may feel more tired, more emotional, less patient, less focused, and less able to cope with everyday demands. It is easy to shrug that off for a while, especially when life is busy.

Tracking can help you:

  • notice whether sleep changes are occasional or becoming more frequent
  • spot links between sleep, night sweats, stress, and next-day energy
  • recognise patterns that may be connected to hormonal changes
  • understand how much poor sleep is affecting daily life
  • feel more prepared if you decide to speak with a healthcare professional

Keeping a sleep diary is commonly recommended to help identify patterns and possible contributors to sleep problems.

Why checking yourself matters

It is easy to tell yourself you are just tired, stressed, or going through a rough patch. Sometimes that is true. But sometimes broken sleep is part of a bigger pattern.

Checking in with yourself matters because it helps move things from vague and exhausting to clearer and more manageable. The more you notice, the easier it becomes to understand what support you may need, what changes may be helping, and when it may be worth seeking more advice.

What this tracker can help you notice

Over time, this tracker can help you see whether your sleep problems are:

  • mainly about falling asleep
  • more about waking during the night
  • linked to night sweats or hot flashes
  • worse on stressful days
  • affecting your mood, focus, and daytime energy more than you realised

It may also help you ask useful questions like:

  • Am I waking more often than I thought?
  • Are hot flashes disturbing my sleep?
  • Is stress making it harder to switch off at night?
  • Am I feeling more tired after certain types of nights?
  • Are small changes helping at all?

Ways to support better sleep

Simple changes can sometimes help improve sleep during perimenopause and menopause. NHS guidance recommends keeping regular sleep habits, avoiding screens before bed, exercising regularly, and trying calming routines. (Femphases)

Helpful things to try may include:

  • keeping a regular bedtime and wake-up time
  • making your bedroom cooler and more comfortable
  • reducing screen time before bed
  • limiting caffeine later in the day
  • building in time to unwind before sleep
  • noticing whether hot flashes, stress, or alcohol seem to make sleep worse

Sleep specialists also recommend CBT for insomnia as an effective treatment for ongoing insomnia.

Important: This tracker is for awareness only. It cannot diagnose insomnia, perimenopause, menopause, or any other sleep or health condition. If your sleep problems are persistent, worsening, or affecting daily life, it may help to speak with a qualified healthcare professional.