Press Snooze? You Lose.It's oh-so-tempting to hit that magical button and doze off for another few minutes, but every time you give in, you're making the wake-up process more difficult.

ByLaura Entis

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

Over the course of a lifetime, the average American spends 3-1/2 months dozing after pressing snooze, according to a recent study conducted on behalf of Withings, a consumer electronics company that sells wearable devices trackingsleepquality. If you're like most Americans, then – of the more than 3,000 surveyed, 57 percent identified as "snoozers" – you hit the button at least once before getting up.

It's easy to understand why this happens; the snooze button is insanely seductive, promising a brief escape into oblivion before you actually have to face the day.

Unfortunately, research suggests that every time you capitulate to its siren call, you're actually making the wake-up process more painful.

Related:How Much Sleep Do You Really Need?

Why? When you doze off after waking up, you'relikely re-starting the sleep cycle, altering the delicate chemical dance that occurs in your bloodstream throughout the course of the night (during the onset of sleep, your body releases serotonin, which soothes; closer to wake-up time, it releases dopamine, which suppresses sleepiness). Your body, understandably, isn't chemically primed to wake up at the beginning of the sleep cycle, making the inevitable get-out-of-bed process much harder.

Hitting the snooze button also increases the effect of sleep inertia, the window of time between when you technically wake up and when you actuallyfeelawake. While the more primitive parts of our brain wake up immediately, the prefrontal cortex -- the area associated with self-control and decision making -- takes longer (up to two to four hours longer, in some cases) to function optimally. Ever experience a hazy, sluggish, brain-half-dead feeling first thing in the morning before your first cup of coffee? That's sleep inertia, and you don't want to mess with it.

Related:How to Become More of a Morning Person (Infographic)

At the end – or, more accurately, beginning – of the day, most sleep experts agree that it's best to get as much interrupted shut-eye as possible, in order to increase your chances of completing a full sleep cycle. So set your alarm for exactly when you know you need to wake up, and skip the doze-off-wake-up-again routine. While it may feel like it in the moment, the snooze button is not your friend.

As David Dinges, who heads the Sleep and Chronobiology laboratory at the University of Pennsylvania, recently toldThe Wall Street Journal, "You'd be better off getting that extra 10 to 20 minutes of real sleep rather than doing that dance with the alarm clock."

Related:Meet the Newest Member of Kickstarter's Million-Dollar Club

Wavy Line
Laura Entis is a reporter for Fortune.com's Venture section.

Editor's Pick

Related Topics

Business News

What Is a 'Lazy Girl Job'? New TikTok Trend Empowers Women to Work However They Want

The trend began as a way for women to find more free time during their days.

Business Process

The Strategy You Need to Make Sure Your Company Can Keep Up in Today's Business World

Discover a superior alternative to a traditional business strategy that prioritizes adaptability, innovation and speed in execution, explores its benefits for entrepreneurs, see real-world scenarios and learn core principles and rules to propel organizations forward with clarity, simplicity and action.

Thought Leaders

I Pitched 300 People a Day For 1 Year — and Learned This Impactful Entrepreneurial Lesson

After working myself to the bone pitching 300 people each day for one year, I came out of that experience as a new man — but surprisingly, an unhappier one. Here's what I learned.

Business Ideas

The Top 10 Home Business Ideas for 2023

Can't figure out which enterprise you should launch in 2023? Check out 10 stellar home business ideas to get inspiration.

Growing a Business

3 Solutions That Help Alleviate Everyday Pressures Small Business Owners Face

We live in a world with increasing pressures from stakeholders, constantly changing customer expectations and volatile financial conditions — which for many, especially business owners — can make it hard to create clear distinctions between professional and personal emotions.