We've all done it — heck, I did it this morning. Reaching for your phone to check emails, texts, or social media first thing has become the modern morning routine for many of us. But it's not a good one.
Jay Rai, an empowerment psychologist specializing in the neuroscience of mental health, writes in Forbes that when we first wake up in the morning, our brains switch from delta waves (produced in a deep sleep state) to theta waves (produced in a daydreamy state) and then to alpha waves, which are produced when we are awake but relaxed and not processing much information, and finaly to beta waves (produced in the fully alert state associated with conscious thought and logical thinking).
Checking your phone immediately upon waking forces your brain to skip the theta and alpha stages of wakefulness and jump straight to the beta state, setting yourself up for stress and distraction.