Thanks everyone. A few spelling mistakes in my last post.
As for my cortisol profile, mine isn't inverted. It's high in the morning and high in the evening (both).
I'm just not sure how it gets to this. I believe my father was the same. He was so stressed in the evenings and couldn't sleep late for the same reasons I can't . He didn't even make 60.
So there must be a condition behind this, and it's that condition I'm trying to determine. As mentioned, maybe it rises at night and stays marginally high all night and then when the light hits my face it rises again (a double whammy in the morning).
Either way, the only thing I can do is manage it. phosphorylated serine seems to be a great way of doing this (going off your posts), but will this help heal the problem (taking into account an improvement in lifestyle factors and diet)?
Thanks