Tuesday, June 16, 2026 Sign InRegister FREE My Account Help
Answers

Is it bad to sleep with the TV on?

Asked by Charlie Reeves — Feb 25, 2025 — Health Resolved

I've fallen asleep with the TV on every night for years. My wife says it's terrible for sleep quality. I feel like I sleep fine. But lately I've been waking up tired. Does the light from the TV actually affect sleep? What about people who need background noise to fall asleep? My friend uses a white noise machine — is that different?

✓ Best Answer
admin — Score: 3

The boring stuff actually works: get enough sleep, drink water, move your body every day, eat more vegetables, don't smoke. There's no magic pill. The companies selling magic pills are the ones making money off people wanting an easy answer.

5 Answers

✓ Best Answer
admin — Feb 26, 2025

The boring stuff actually works: get enough sleep, drink water, move your body every day, eat more vegetables, don't smoke. There's no magic pill. The companies selling magic pills are the ones making money off people wanting an easy answer.

3
Alice Hartwell — Feb 26, 2025

I'm not a doctor and you should definitely talk to your physician about this. That said, the general medical consensus seems to be that moderation is key. Most health concerns come from extremes in either direction.

3
Avtoservis_gmei — Feb 27, 2025

I work in healthcare and see this question frequently. The short answer is that individual results vary enormously. What works for one person might not work for another. The best approach is to work with your doctor to find what's right for your specific situation.

2
Avtoservis_inei — Feb 28, 2025

Be careful trusting health advice you find on the internet, including mine. There's a LOT of junk out there — supplement companies and diet gurus trying to sell you something. WebMD is decent for general info but it can't replace an actual doctor.

2
Avtoservis_hnei — Feb 26, 2025

I asked my doctor this exact question. They said most of what you read about this is overblown and the actual risk is small for a normal healthy person. The news loves a scary health headline. Ask your own doctor before you panic.

0

This question is resolved and no longer accepting answers.

 

FlameNet Weekly: the best of the forum, freshest listings, top Q&A — delivered every Sunday.
13 members · 0 new today · 0 online now · 826 posts in last 24h