The phrase
"snooze button" refers to a feature on an alarm clock or phone that allows you to temporarily stop the alarm for a few extra minutes of sleep before it goes off again.
Full definition
In adult female mice, MIS can also be a perpetual
snooze button for primordial follicles, Pépin and colleagues, including Mass General and Harvard pediatric surgeon Patricia Donahoe, reported in the Feb. 28 Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
We created fun, cheesy bad assery alarm tones (yes, that's me really singing and playing guitar to wake your ass up;) and one of my favorite features of the #RockClock is the dreaded
snooze button does not exist.
It also has a dimmable clock display that'll tell you the weather in addition to the time, and it has an all - important
physical snooze button.
The device has a colorful
snooze button shell, plus some smaller buttons to control volume, toggle the LED display (it also dims to off over time), and play / pause music.
«The
average snooze button time is seven to nine minutes, which is not enough time for the body to return to deep sleep,» says Michael Breus, PhD, author of The Sleep Doctor's Diet Plan.
Most of you sleeping beauties have an ongoing affair with that
tantalizing snooze button — and understandably so — It is rather tempting.
It's already so much harder to get up in the morning with the sun hitting its own
seasonal snooze button, and adding foods high in fat, sugar and salt can make it even more challenging to rise to the occasion for your AM workout.
I went to sleep with the intention to wake up earlier and start the day right but I kept hitting that
stupid snooze button and ended up waking up late!
iOS 11 offers one solution to this by storing your old notifications off your initial lock screen (so you can catch up on them even if you accidentally dismiss the screen), but that can get quickly cluttered; having
specific snooze buttons for individual alerts allows them to pop back up — and, if necessary, stay present on the screen — for you to deal with them.
To break that
vicious snooze button cycle (followed by the rush to get ready and the inevitable missed train), you need Ruggie, «the world's best alarm clock».
On the front is a large display that shows the time, and alarms you've set (it's dimmable), and the top has buttons to control music playback and Google Assistant, as well as a
physical snooze button.
Even though there's no single «morning person gene» the results indicate that your love of
the snooze button isn't entirely down to laziness, personal choice or your environment.
And fitting in exercise — supposed to alleviate not just fatigue but jet lag, too — is a challenge when
the snooze button's so inviting and the hotel gym so uninspiring.
If you're just pounding
the snooze button earlier, don't bother..
The temptation to hit
the snooze button and get more zzz's is strong, especially if you haven't logged enough shut - eye.
Whether we're limiting the times we hit
the snooze button, increasing our attendance at the gym or improving our work performance, setting goals is essential in order to generate change.
Use a smart alarm to break
the snooze button habit.
The snooze button was designed to allow people to go back to sleep for a few minutes without reentering a deep sleep cycle, but it can hinder your transformation into an early riser, says Dr. W. Christopher Winter, medical director for the Martha Jefferson Hospital Sleep Medicine Center in Charlottesville, Va..
In regards to those other new «innovations,» well, no one can be blamed for hitting
the snooze button.
When you hit
the snooze button and fall back asleep, you lose this alertness and wake up later, tired and groggy.
Hitting
the snooze button.
A typical morning for most consists of picking up the phone right after they wake up to check email and social media, hitting
the snooze button multiple times and never being intentional about positively fueling their mind and body before the workday.
If you're busy, there's
a snooze button that will continue to remind you at 10 - minute intervals.
If you're
a snooze button tapper — even if only you hit the button only once before rising and shining — research shows that you're making your get - out - of - bed process even tougher.
You're not doing yourself any favors when you hit
that snooze button and drift back to sleep.
Don't ever click your alarm's
snooze button.
Lazy people hit
their snooze button and wait until the last possible minute to get out of bed in the morning.
The snooze button was designed to allow people to go back to sleep for a few minutes without reentering a deep sleep cycle, but it can hinder your transformation into an early riser, says Winter.
If it's hitting
the snooze button, stumbling out of bed and into the shower, you're missing out on a chance to boost your energy levels.
With this one phrase, your interviewee will generally hit
the snooze button or at the very least, be somewhat irritated.
Then one morning I hit
the snooze button.
It might feel like pressing
the snooze button in the morning gives you a little bit of extra rest to start your day, but the truth is that it does more harm than good.
Most of us are all too familiar with waking in the morning, only to repeatedly reach for
the snooze button.
If your first instinct when the alarm goes off is to hit
the snooze button, chances are, you went to bed too late.
When asked by TV and radio personality Ryan Seacrest if he ever hits «
snooze button,» Obama fessed up that the White House operator calls and wakes him up.
Another suggestion from the Sleep Junkies is to glue
your snooze button so it no longer works.
So, how do you get out of
the snooze button habit?
So, while most of us may be waking up at 6:30 or 7 a.m. and hitting
the snooze button for 20 minutes, early risers at ungodly hours appear to have unlocked the secrets to «seizing the day.»
Hitting
the snooze button makes you feel more tired.
Through college and in our twenties, hitting
the snooze button is a staple of Saturday mornings and workweek rushing around, but there's a reason so many influential people get started early.
It seems that, in the midst of black Christian outcry in 2013, the majority of white Christians pressed
the snooze button on racial justice, sleepwalking into their churches where an individualistic gospel that doesn't call them to say or do anything about racial injustice is preached, where white culture, rather than Christ, reigns supreme, and where the problems and perspectives of black people are ignored.
So often we hit
the snooze button on Life and coast in a dreamy state of passivity.