The Real Reason You Wake Up at 3 a.m. — It Is Not Your Adrenals

Dr. Eric Berg — YouTube (gGuF6X1cd_Y)


If you habitually bolt awake at 2:00 or 3:00 a.m. with your heart pounding and your mind racing, you have probably been told it is an adrenal problem. Dr. Eric Berg used to teach exactly that. He no longer does. The real culprit, he argues, is the liver — specifically, its inability to maintain stable fuel delivery to the brain overnight because of fatty liver disease and insulin resistance. Once you understand the mechanism, the fix becomes obvious.

The Brain’s Nightly Fuel Supply

During sleep, the brain relies almost entirely on glucose shipped from the liver. It cannot raid muscle glycogen stores. A healthy liver stockpiles enough sugar to power the brain through six, seven, or eight hours without a hiccup. But a compromised liver cannot hold that reserve.

Berg identifies three common reasons the liver fails:

Why Insulin Resistance Wrecks Sleep

At night, the liver performs gluconeogenesis — making new glucose from non-carbohydrate sources. In an insulin-resistant liver, that production runs unchecked. The result is not steady fuel; it is a rollercoaster. Blood sugar spikes, insulin surges to push it down, and then it crashes.

When the brain senses that crash, it panics. It signals for emergency fuel, and the body releases adrenaline. Adrenaline dumps glucose into the bloodstream in seconds — but it is also a potent stimulant. That is why you snap awake at 3:00 a.m. feeling wired.

Berg is explicit: the waking hormone is adrenaline, not cortisol. Cortisol is slower and more wave-like; it tends to rouse people later, around 5:00 a.m. The midnight-to-3:00 a.m. window is an adrenaline event triggered by a blood-sugar low.

What a Dysfunctional Liver Costs You Overnight

Beyond glucose diplomacy, the liver runs a graveyard shift most people never think about:

When these processes stall, you do not just wake up; you wake up feeling toxic and exhausted.

The Lifestyle Damage Stack

Berg lists the usual suspects that create a fatty, insulin-resistant liver:

Gallbladder Sludge and the Right-Rib Mystery

A swollen liver or sluggish gallbladder can create a dull, full sensation under the right rib cage, sometimes with bloating or referred pain up into the right shoulder blade. Berg spent twenty years chasing this with chiropractors before realizing it was bile sludge pressing on the phrenic nerve. Sleeping on your right side can ease the pressure; sleeping on the left can compress the heart and worsen restless sleep.

Ketones: The Liver’s Alternate Brain Fuel

There is an elegant workaround. The brain does not have to run on glucose. The vast majority of brain tissue can run on ketones, which the liver manufactures from fat during carbohydrate restriction. A small amount of glucose is still required, but the liver can supply that endogenously without needing dietary carbs.

The catch is adaptation time. Dropping straight into a strict ketogenic diet can temporarily worsen sleep because the liver has not yet ramped up ketone production. Berg advises a gradual transition — stepping carbs down toward 50 grams, then 30 — so the brain never experiences a fuel vacuum. Full adaptation typically takes one to two weeks.

Practical Recovery Plan

StepActionRationale
1Stop eating 4 hours before bedEliminates the blood-sugar swing that triggers the first midnight adrenaline spike.
2Increase cholineEgg yolks, liver, grass-fed meat, salmon, cruciferous vegetables. Choline exports liver fat.
3Eat sulfur-rich foodsGarlic, onions, cruciferous vegetables, sauerkraut. Powers detox pathways.
4Support bile flowBitter greens (arugula, dandelion), bile salts (Tudca) to thin sludge and open ducts.
5Go low-carb / ketogenicSwitch the brain to ketones, bypassing insulin resistance entirely.
6Manage blood sugar & stressApple cider vinegar before meals, vitamin B1 for mental tension, magnesium and potassium for relaxation and insulin sensitivity.

Key Lessons

Why This Is Worth Watching

For anyone who treats 3:00 a.m. insomnia as a cortisol or adrenal issue, this reframe is worth testing. The protocol is simple, inexpensive, and measurable: cut late carbs, raise choline and sulfur, transition gradually into ketosis, and see if the midnight adrenaline surges disappear within two weeks. If Berg’s own two-decade cycle of misdiagnosed shoulder tension and bloated ribs is any indication, the root cause may have been sitting under your right rib cage the whole time.