Why you need a morning ritual and how to start it
A Life / / January 06, 2021
Bryan Ye
Content Designer at Atlassian. Writes about self-development on a blog on Medium.
Morning rituals are a popular topic among those interested in self-development. Usually everyone either already has a ritual, or they are trying to start it, or they dream that they have enough endurance for it.
Productivity gurus promise life-changing. Sounds too good to be true, you say. I decided to share my story and my own ritual, because I have been following it for over half a year.
This is what my morning looks like:
- 5:00 - wake up and making entries in my diary.
- 5:30 am - shower and brush my teeth.
- 5:40 am - moisturize my skin, dress, make my bed, put on sunscreen.
- 5:50 am - meditate.
- 6:00 - I'm writing.
- 8:00 am driving to work.
Yes, I have a three hour morning ritual. I follow it every day, only on weekends, instead of going to work, I continue to write, read, or do sports. On weekdays, I have breakfast at work, and although I am hungry earlier, I don’t, because fasting a little is good.
I didn't create this ritual because I wanted to be more productive. It's just that my life was a complete chaos. I needed stability, and I forced myself to write in my diary right after waking up. Then I decided that I would write a little. Then I wanted to do more and started waking up at five. Gradually, the ritual turned into the current three-hour monster.
I did not plan to constantly live in this mode, but after a few months I did not want to return to the previous chaotic version.
I used to lay down and get up when you want and was going to work at a run. I wrote little, telling myself that I was in crisis. Now I write every day, regardless of fatigue or lack of inspiration. I do it just by following my routine.
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Why is it needed at all
This will teach you to control your decisions.
In my opinion, the most important part of the morning rituals is not the actual actions you perform. There is hardly anything in my ritual that can drastically change my life, except perhaps meditation. What is important is the fact that I decided to do them in this order. And I do it every morning.
The morning ritual forces you to be disciplined. By repeating it over and over again, you train your ability to follow the decisions you make.
I'm used to living with a type of thinking in which you only react to emerging events. For example, you put off the alarm, and then you jump up and rush to work. And with the morning ritual, you start to think proactively: you decide how to spend your time, and you realize it. And this new thinking for me began to manifest itself not only in the morning.
Now I rarely get stuck on Netflix, YouTube or Twitch like I used to. Of course, I still watch the videos, I just don't fall through them for hours anymore. Now I watch one or two twenty-minute episodes of some comedy a day, that's all. It took me six months to watch The Big Bang Theory. I spent my time on something else and am grateful for that.
This will reduce the number of decisions made.
If you repeat the actions from the morning ritual long enough, they will become automatic. I used to be an author with a chronic writing crisis. It was difficult for me to "decide" to write something. I often put it off and walked passively consume content. Now, as soon as the clock shows six in the morning, I write.
I don’t decide whether to write or not write — I write because it’s part of my routine. And I don't stop until eight.
This approach saves energy for more important tasks. It helps me tune in to deep thought, rather than wasting my mental energy on trifles like doing in the morning.
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How to create your own morning ritual
Structure what you already do
I didn't do the three-hour morning ritual in one go, but started small. Organized what I used to do in the morning. Basically all I need to do is get up on time, brush my teeth, get dressed, make my bed and leave the house.
Think back to what you usually do, and arrange these tasks in some order. In which one, it doesn't matter, if only one case does not depend on another. For example, first have breakfast, then brush your teeth. The main thing now is to make a decision and follow it.
Start getting up earlier
If you don't want to rush in the morning, you have to wake up early. How much depends on how fast you are going and what you want to do. Even 10 minutes is enough for a start. That's where I started. Before the introduction of the ritual, I got up at 7:50, got ready in 10 minutes and ran out to work. I did well, but every time I was stressed. It was necessary to constantly look at the clock so as not to hesitate - life is so-so.
Consider what you are going to add to your routine
Let's say you want to meditate. Decide if you will do this with an instructor or sit in silence, use the timer or not. Think about what position you will sit in and where, how much time you will spend on meditation.
If you've never tried before, don't try to meditate for long periods of time right away. Choose a length of time that will be easy for you day after day. Let it be 3 minutes, no big deal. Gradually add a couple of minutes until you get to a time that is comfortable for you.
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How to make it take root
Don't just change the order
And certainly never change it out of laziness. Remember, your routine is a workout exercise. disciplines. Find the optimal sequence of things and stick to it. Exception - you realized that something needs to be swapped for convenience.
Add one new case at a time
Some will advise you to do stretching in the morning, others will say to write down your thoughts in a diary, and others will suggest meditating. Don't add it all at once. You became interested in morning rituals because your usual morning did not suit you in some way. Think about what exactly you are missing and add that first.
Maybe you sit a lot and feel that your muscles need to work. Or you live in a constant rush, but you want to calmly think and analyze your feelings. Or you are stressed and want to restore your balance. Choose what you need most now.
Do not overestimate your capabilities, otherwise you will soon abandon a new ritual.
When I decided to write in the morning, I planned for two hours. However, going from zero to two hours was very difficult, almost impossible. I failed. Almost gave up in the beginning. Old I would give up. But I decided to start again, only with less - 30 minutes. And then he tried to think not in minutes, but in words, and decided to write a thousand words. It was only necessary to reach this mark.
I usually did it in an hour, but what I wrote was not good for publication. The next goal was to write a thousand words, which are not ashamed to publish. Gradually, I came to what I am doing now - I write for two hours (now I have many more than a thousand words coming out).
Improve what doesn't work
Repeating the same actions over and over again, you will surely notice that some little things can be improved. Do this.
For example, I first meditated with the instructor, but I realized that this does not suit me. I didn't like listening to the same recordings, and having to choose from a variety of options one thing caused me stress. Now I am meditating in silence. For someone else, it may be quite the opposite. Listen to yourself and consider your own characteristics.
Gradually begin to expand the ritual
When it comes to rituals, longer doesn't mean better. But if you feel like doing more in the morning or trying something new, expand your ritual. Add new habits one at a time and see how they affect your life.
I started by writing in my diary, then waking up at five, which gave me the opportunity to write. At first I wrote in my pajamas, but I began to notice that I was worried if I could finish and get ready for work on time. So I rearranged the order and began to shower and dress, and only then write. This relieved me of unnecessary anxiety while writing.
Then he added meditation. I already meditated in the evenings, but I wanted to see if the effect of the morning meditation would be. It turned out that after her I write even more calmly. To some, all these small permutations may seem nonsense, but such a gradual process of repetition and experimentation suits me.
Don't be afraid of failure
If you do something long enough, someday you will definitely fail. It simply cannot be otherwise.
Every morning is an opportunity to fail. This happens to me almost every day.
I don't always get up at exactly five, sometimes it turns out at 5:07 or 5:15. It takes me a few minutes to write. It seems to be a trifle, but I start to get angry with myself and think that in this case it is not worth writing at all.
I also want to not pick up my phone until eight in the morning for anything other than meditation. I don't want to go to social networks until I finish writing. But I go to bed at nine in the evening, and friends write later, so by the morning a lot of notifications accumulate. And, naturally, there is a temptation to watch them immediately after meditation.
It seems that these are all minor failures, but for me they are fundamental. One of my goals is to be more disciplined, and it turns out that I fail all the time. This makes you want to give up.
Do not give up
But I still don’t give up. Every morning I try again and again, and when I get used to it, I raise the bar. I used to write for only 30 minutes, remember? And now for two hours.
Failure will take away your motivation. Lest they break you, accept the fact that they are inevitable and keep moving forward. Perhaps at first you will get only 50% of what you planned. For example, the strength is only half enough workoutsthat you wanted to do. Consider this a new starting point. Tomorrow do 51%, then 52%, 53% and so on.
I have a long morning ritual, but I am not a robot that does everything perfectly and does not feel emotion.
I wake up in the dark and sometimes I am ready to cry from how I do not want to crawl out from under the covers. When I meditate, I have thoughts of getting up and climbing back into bed. Before I start writing, I panic, looking at a blank sheet. Words don't always come to me and I start thinking about giving up writing.
I often fail. And unless you are a Buddhist monk, they are waiting for you too. Even so, the morning ritual is worth it.
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What will you get in the end
My life has changed a lot since I started practicing the morning ritual. I will not say that she became better precisely from the actions that I perform. But I'm sure the ritual itself influenced me.
For the first time in my life, I became disciplined.
I didn't grow up like that. I did what I want and when I want. Didn't demand anything from myself and spent a lot of wasted time. I played computer games and watched YouTube videos every free minute. But I've written more in the past six months than in my entire life. Recently I finished draft versions of the novel and story. I have never created such great works before.
Naturally, the morning ritual did not solve all my problems. I still have conflicts at work, difficult relationships and days when I feel like wrapping myself in a blanket and doing nothing. But he created an environment for me in which I cope better with the rest of my life. He made me proactive.
I love my morning ritual, but I will definitely change something in it when my goals change. What I am doing now is helping me write. Perhaps one day I will give up on this and decide to go in for sports in the morning. In any case, the morning ritual will help me do what is important to me.
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