This Is the First Thing Most People Think About When They Wake Up

Spoiler alert: Itโ€™s not sexโ€”or their phones.

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Research shows that most people reach for their phones as soon as they wake up. But what motivatesย you to finally take the plunge and getย out of bed?ย If you rise and shine withย money on your mind, you’re not the only one.

A new survey reportsย that most Americans first think of money and work when they wake upย in the morningโ€”56 percent of men and 48 percent of women, respectively. And thoseย thoughts might be influencing more than just your sleep schedule. According to the survey, people who woke up thinking about work and money were less likely to hit snooze on their alarms. What’s more,ย the peak salary ($46,000) was associated with a 5 a.m. wake-up time, while those who woke up at 6 a.m. reported higherย job satisfaction and anย average salary of about $41,000. (Hereโ€™s how to wake up without a struggle next time, no alarm necessary.)

That doesnโ€™t necessarily mean that people who wake up thinking about work and resisting the urgeย to snooze are more successful, though. In fact,ย the real reason you hit snooze in the morning might have to do with your line of work. The survey found that government and public administration employees were theย most likely wake up thinking about their careersย (76 percent reported thinking about work first thing in the a.m.; 52 percent don’t hitย snooze), followed by people in the finance and insurance industries (70 percent think about their jobs upon rising andย 45 percent donโ€™t snooze). Meanwhile, whose who think the least about work in the morningย are people in theย legal professions, where 50 percent think first thing of their jobs and onlyย 28 percent resist the snooze button.

Conclusion: This bad bedroom habitย may have less to do with one’s success and more to do with their work schedule and hours; those who work late in to the evening might rise later, as well. These are the worst jobs for sleep, according to science.

“People in finance may need to get up earlier thinking about work because they have to see what the stock market in Singapore is doing in order to succeed,” Dr. Richard Castriotta, medical director of the Sleep Disorders Center at Memorial Hermann-Texas Medical Center, told NBC News. “It really depends on the person, but also on their line of work.”

Truth be told, this is the very first thing you should do when you wake up. And trust us, itโ€™s way better than thinking about work.

[Source: NBC News]

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