Waking up earlier is a secondary effect of going to bed earlier and/or getting better sleep. If you go to bed earlier and sleep well, waking up earlier shouldn't be a problem. Here are some strategies that I employed:<p>* Drug yourself if needed (benadryl or melatonin work pretty well for a lot of people - if you use melatonin, <a href="https://slatestarcodex.com/2018/07/10/melatonin-much-more-than-you-wanted-to-know/" rel="nofollow">https://slatestarcodex.com/2018/07/10/melatonin-much-more-th...</a> is of interest)<p>* Stay away from alcohol. It can help you get to sleep, but the quality of your sleep is materially worse. For me, as little as half of a beer can absolutely <i>wreck</i> a night of sleep.<p>* Get away from bright screens before bed. No TV, no computers, no phone, etc. If you really must, try an eink ebook reader (kindle, remarkable, etc). Read a book. Write (on paper). Practice a musical instrument. Listen to an audiobook. Literally anything other than staring at a screen.<p>* No caffeine intake after ~3pm ish (if this doesn't help, try earlier cutoff times).<p>* If you snore a lot (and especially if a partner tells you you stop breathing or sound like you're choking or something), get tested for sleep apnea. Sleeping with a CPAP changed my life. I genuinely can't remember a single day in my life where I woke up feeling rested until I was 28 years old, which is when I got my CPAP.<p>* Lower the temperature in your home about an hour before bed if possible. A few degrees (Fahrenheit) will do. For extra effect: take a really hot shower right before going to bed. The temperature swing from hot to cold can help you get to sleep faster.<p>* If you don't already do so, try taking a short walk during the day (15-20 min or so). A tiny amount of exercise during the day really changes how I sleep.<p>* Go to bed and get up at the same time every day (even weekends). If you feel the need to sleep in on the weekends, you're probably not sleeping enough.<p>* Gradually darken your environment at night, brighten it in the morning around the time you want to wake up. Smart light bulbs (Phillips Hue and the like) are great tools for this, especially when paired with something like home assistant. I shift all of my lights a bit warmer/more red toward the end of my day, then ~30 minutes before I want to wake up, I start fading up the lights in my bedroom to full brightness (over the course of 20 minutes so that the lights reach full brightness ~10 minutes before I want to wake up). Most days, I am awake before my alarm goes off. As an added bonus, waking up this way feels much better -- I am always slightly startled by my alarm, so I start the day mildly grumpy if that's how I wake up.<p>* If you silence your alarm and then go back to sleep in the mornings, I find it helpful to move the alarm across the room so that you have to physically get out of bed to turn it off. Once you're up, stay up. Don't let yourself learn that it's okay to wake up and then immediately go back to sleep.<p>YMMV, I'm not a doctor, etc, etc.