In Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM), waking at 3 a.m. often signals an imbalance in the Liver (1 a.m. - 3 a.m.), related to unprocessed anger, stress, and detoxification, while waking at 3 a.m. - 5 a.m. points to the Lungs, associated with grief, sadness, or immune issues, as the body's vital energy (Qi) cycles through organs.
1-3am is the time of the Liver and a time when the body should be alseep. During this time, toxins are released from the body and fresh new blood is made. If you find yourself waking during this time, you could have too much yang energy or problems with your liver or detoxification pathways.
The Dawn Phenomenon. Between 3 AM and 6 AM, your body prepares to wake by releasing cortisol and growth hormone — part of the natural circadian process. In some people, especially those with insulin resistance or suboptimal glucose control, this can cause an early spike in blood sugar and restlessness.
Cortisol's Natural Rhythm: Our bodies follow a natural circadian rhythm for cortisol, with levels beginning to rise in the early morning (around 3am) to promote alertness upon waking. As the day unfolds, cortisol levels should gradually diminish, reaching their low point at night.
Repetitive 3 a.m. wake-ups might mean an urgent spiritual communication, says Adams, explaining, “It often signals a persistent call from your spirit guides or higher self, urging you to pay attention to unresolved emotional issues, spiritual growth opportunities or your true life path.”
Waking Between 1 am and 3 am: Liver
The liver governs the smooth flow of qi throughout the body and is responsible for detoxification. If you wake during this time, it may reflect liver congestion due to stress, toxins, or suppressed emotions. Physical Symptoms: Tension, digestive issues, irritability.
How to prevent cortisol spikes at night? Prevent cortisol spikes at night by keeping stress low, getting enough sleep, staying in sync with your circadian rhythm (or body clock), avoiding late-night intense exercise, and eating a healthy diet.
High cortisol levels, often from chronic stress or conditions like Cushing's Syndrome, cause symptoms like weight gain (especially around the belly, face, and neck), fatigue, high blood pressure, high blood sugar (leading to diabetes), thinning skin, easy bruising, acne, and mood changes (anxiety, irritability), plus potential issues with sleep, digestion, and reproductive health.
I wake up in the middle of the night and can't get back to sleep. What can I do?
There's some spiritual significance to the 3am wake-up.
Coined the "witching hour," it's been said that the hour between 3am and 4am offers the most access to one's natural state of being.
The number 333 becomes a powerful sign of divine communication, spiritual alignment, and good fortune. If you find yourself waking up at 3:33 AM, it's believed that your angel spirit or higher guidance is encouraging you to trust your intuition and make an important decision you've been avoiding.
Cortisol production begins its natural morning rise around 3am, preparing your system for eventual waking hours before sunrise. When this process misfires—starting too early or surging too aggressively—you end up wide awake in the middle of the night. Your core body temperature reaches its lowest point between 2-4am.
It's LIVER time! According to Traditional Chinese Medicine, each organ system of the body has a time of day that it is more active than others.
If Heat stays in the Liver and its meridian, the symptoms of the patient will include irritability, red and dry eyes, hypochondriac pain and distension, dream-disturbed sleep, insomnia, headache, dizziness and tinnitus.
Try to get 7-8 hours of sleep each night, sleeping as much as possible before midnight. Your body repairs itself best between 10 p.m. and 2 a.m. If you have trouble relaxing or falling asleep: Go to bed only when you feel sleepy.
Green tea, as well as beverages that contain minerals and herbs like magnesium, ginseng, and ashwagandha, may lower cortisol. Kefir, yogurt drinks, and barley juice could lower cortisol because they naturally contain GABA, a neurotransmitter that reduces cortisol.
Equally unfortunate is the fact that cortisol belly doesn't have a specific appearance, despite what countless infographics on the internet will tell you. Cortisol belly simply looks like abdominal fat, and there is no way to identify it by appearance.
TYPES OF AT-HOME CORTISOL TESTS
The three main options are saliva, urine, and blood tests. Saliva tests are non-invasive and often taken multiple times during the day, morning, afternoon, evening, and bedtime to show how cortisol fluctuates in a natural daily rhythm.
In the early morning — between approximately 3 a.m. and 8 a.m. — your body releases a surge of hormones, including cortisol and growth hormone. These hormones signal your liver to boost its production of glucose, which provides energy that helps you wake up. This boost of glucose increases your blood sugar (glucose).
To get rid of excess cortisol, focus on stress reduction through mindfulness, deep breathing, and quality sleep, alongside a balanced diet rich in whole foods, omega-3s, magnesium, and B vitamins, while limiting sugar, processed items, and caffeine; regular, moderate exercise and connecting with nature also significantly help manage stress and lower cortisol levels.
Your circadian rhythm needs a reset
Hormone changes, stress, and lifestyle habits can throw off your internal body clock. That 3 AM wake-up can be a nudge from your circadian rhythm: a reminder to get more daylight in the morning, go to bed at a consistent time, and create a calming wind-down routine.
1am – 3am: Liver Time
This is the time when we should be deeply asleep. The Liver works to process and detoxify both your physical and emotional experiences from the day. If you find yourself tossing and turning or waking repeatedly around 3am, it may indicate an overburdened Liver.
Four key warning signs of a damaged liver include jaundice (yellow skin/eyes), abdominal issues (swelling, pain), fatigue/weakness, and changes in urine/stool color, alongside symptoms like itchy skin, easy bruising, confusion, or nausea, indicating the liver isn't filtering toxins or clotting blood properly.
Vitamin E. Vitamin E is an antioxidant, which means it's a nutrient that may help protect cells against damage. Research suggests that in people who have MASLD, vitamin E may boost the liver's natural antioxidants, help reduce liver inflammation and scarring, and help prevent fat buildup.