Daily Routine For Success
Most guides on daily routines are garbage. They’re written by people who don’t seem to live on planet Earth. They tell you to wake up at 4 AM, meditate for an hour, journal your life story, and then drink a kale smoothie that looks like swamp water.
That’s not a routine; it's a performance.
Real success isn't about a perfect, Instagram-worthy morning. It’s about building a system that doesn't fall apart when life gets messy. It’s about a few small things, done every day, that actually make a difference.
The Myth of the Perfect Morning
The idea that you need to do 17 things before 7 AM is a trap. For most people, a good morning routine has one job: to win the first hour. Just one. Not the whole day. Just the first 60 minutes.
Start with one or two things. Drink a full glass of water. Stretch for five minutes. That’s it. You’re winning. The goal isn't to become a monk overnight; it's to build a tiny bit of momentum.
Doing two things every single day is more powerful than doing ten things once a week.
The Anchor Habit: Your Single Source of Truth
Forget building 10 new habits at once. It's a recipe for failure. Pick one. Just one anchor habit that you will do every single day. This is your non-negotiable.
Maybe it's a 20-minute walk. Maybe it's reading 10 pages of a book. Maybe it's a 15-minute focus session on your most important task.
I remember when I first tried this. My anchor habit was simple: check my habit tracker and plan my top three priorities for the day. One morning, I was running late for a meeting, coffee in one hand, keys in the other. I tripped walking out of my apartment—phone went flying, hit the pavement of the parking garage, and shattered. This was back when I had a 2011 Honda Civic, and the phone landed right by the front tire. My immediate thought wasn't about the phone. It was: "I haven't checked my tracker yet."