Tesal reaching for the sky.
8 Steps to Having
Wildly Productive Mornings
James Clear
You’ll wake up for about 25,000 mornings in your adult life, give or
take a few.
According to a report from the World Health
Organization, the average life expectancy in the
United States is 79 years old. Most people in wealthy
nations are hovering around the 80–year mark. Women in Japan are the highest,
with an average life expectancy of 86 years.
If we use these average life expectancy numbers and
assume that your adult life starts
at 18 years old, then you’ve got about 68 years as an
adult. (86 – 18 = 68)
Perhaps a little less on average. A little more if you’re
lucky.
(68 years as an adult) x (365 days each year) = 24,820
days.
Once I realized this, I started thinking about how I
could develop a better morning routine.
I still have a lot to learn, but here are some strategies
that you can use to get the most
out of your 25,000 mornings.
Here are eight strategies that I’ve found to be most
effective for getting the most
out of my morning:
1. Manage your energy, not your time.
If you take a moment to think about it, you’ll probably realize that you are better at
If you take a moment to think about it, you’ll probably realize that you are better at
doing certain tasks at certain times. For example, my
creative energy is highest in the morning,
so that’s when I do my writing each day.
By comparison, I block out my afternoons for interviews,
phone calls, and emails.
I don’t need my creative energy to be high for those
tasks, so that’s the best time for me
to get them done. And I tend to have my best workouts in
the late afternoon or early evening,
so that’s when I head to the gym.
What type of energy do you have in the morning? What task
is that energy best suited for?
2. Prepare the night before.
I don’t do this nearly as often as I should, but if you only do one thing each day
I don’t do this nearly as often as I should, but if you only do one thing each day
then spend a few minutes each night organizing your to–do
list for tomorrow.
When I do it right, I’ll outline the article I’m going to
write the next day
and develop a short list of the most important items for
me to accomplish.
It takes 10 minutes that night and saves 3 hours the next
day.
3. Don’t open email until noon.
Sounds simple. Nobody does it. It took me awhile to get over the urge to open my inbox,
Sounds simple. Nobody does it. It took me awhile to get over the urge to open my inbox,
but eventually I realized that everything can wait a few
hours.
Nobody is going to email you about a true emergency (a death in the family, etc.),
so leave
your email alone for the first few hoursof each day.
Use the morning to do what’s important
rather than responding to what is “urgent.”
4. Turn your phone
off and leave it in another room.
Or on your colleagues desk. Or at the very least, put it somewhere that is out of sight.
Or on your colleagues desk. Or at the very least, put it somewhere that is out of sight.
This eliminates the urge to check text messages,
Facebook, Twitter, and so on.
This simple strategy eliminates the likelihood
of slipping into half–work
where you waste time dividing your attention among
meaningless tasks.
5. Work in a cool
place.
Have you ever noticed how you feel groggy and sluggish in a hot room? Turning the temperature down or moving to a cooler place is an easy way to focus your mind and body.
Have you ever noticed how you feel groggy and sluggish in a hot room? Turning the temperature down or moving to a cooler place is an easy way to focus your mind and body.
(Hat tip to Michael Hyatt for this one.)
6. Sit up or stand
up.
Your mind needs oxygen to work properly. Your lungs need to be able to expand and contract
Your mind needs oxygen to work properly. Your lungs need to be able to expand and contract
to fill your body with oxygen. That sounds simple enough,
but here’s the problem:
most people sit hunched over while staring at a screen
and typing.
When you sit hunched over, your chest is in a collapsed
position and your diaphragm is
pressing against the bottom of your lungs, which hinders
your ability to breathe easily and deeply. Sit up straight or stand up and
you’ll find that you can breathe easier and more fully.
As a result, your brain will get more oxygen and you’ll
be able to concentrate better.
(Small tip: When sitting, I usually place a pillow in the
small of my back.
This prevents my lower back from rounding, which keeps me
more upright.)
7. Eat as a reward
for working hard.
I practice intermittent fasting, which means that I eat my first meal around noon each day.
I practice intermittent fasting, which means that I eat my first meal around noon each day.
I’ve been doing this for almost two years. There are
plenty of health benefits,
which I explained in great detail here.
But health is just one piece of the puzzle. I also fast
because it allows me to get more out of my day. Take a moment to think about
how much time people spend each day thinking, planning,
and consuming food. By adopting intermittent fasting, I
don’t waste an hour each morning
figuring out what to eat for breakfast, cooking it, and
cleaning up.
Instead, I use my morning to work on things that are
important to me.
Then, I eat good food and big meals as a reward for
working hard.
8. Develop a
“pre–game routine” to start your day.
My morning routine starts by pouring a cold glass of water. Some people kick off their day
My morning routine starts by pouring a cold glass of water. Some people kick off their day
with ten minutes of meditation. Similarly, you should
have a sequence that starts your morning ritual. This tiny routine signals to
your brain that it’s time to get into work mode or exercise mode
or whatever mode you need to be in to accomplish your
task. Additionally, a pre–game routine helps you overcome a lack of motivation
and get things done even when you don’t feel like it.
The Power of a
Morning Routine
Just as it’s rare for anyone to experience overnight
success, it’s also rare for our lives
o crumble to pieces in an instant. Most unproductive or
unhealthy behaviors are the result of slow, gradual choices that add up to bad
habits.
A wasted morning here. An unproductive morning there.
The good news is that exceptional results are also the
result of consistent daily choices.
Nowhere is this more true than with your morning routine.
The way you start your day is often the way that you
finish it.
Take, for example, Jack LaLanne. He woke up each day
at 4am and spent the first 90 minutes
lifting weights. Then, he went for a swim or a run for
the next 30 minutes.
For more than 60 years, he spent each morning doing this
routine.
In addition to being one of the most influential people in fitness in the last 100 years,
LaLanne also lived to
the ripe old age of 96.
This is no coincidence. What you do each morning is an
indicator of how you approach
your entire day. It’s the choices that we repeatedly make
that determine the life we live,
the health we enjoy, and the work we create.
You’ve got 25,000 mornings. What will you do with each
one?
A version of this article previously appeared
on JamesClear.com. For useful ideas on improving your mental and physical
performance, join his free weekly newsletter.
https://www.entrepreneur.com/article/230240
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To quote the Dr Seuss
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