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Your internal clock also shifts earlier. You may feel sleepy sooner in the evening and wake up very early in the morning. Sleep becomes lighter and more fragmented, with frequent awakenings during the night, even if you don’t always recall them.
This doesn’t mean sleep is worse—just different. Trying to force old routines often leads to insomnia and frustration. Your body is simply operating on a new rhythm.
4. Temperature regulation weakens
As a result, older adults often feel cold when others are comfortable or become overheated more easily. Signals for thirst, chills, or overheating also become less reliable, increasing the risk of dehydration, heat exhaustion, or hypothermia.
Overall tolerance to temperature changes drops noticeably.
3. Digestion slows and becomes more sensitive
The body produces less saliva, stomach acid, and digestive enzymes. Nutrient absorption becomes less efficient, and intestinal movement slows, often causing bloating, heaviness, and constipation.
This isn’t a sudden food intolerance—it’s a physical change in how the digestive system functions.