Most advice on daily routines is garbage. It’s written for robots who wake up at 5 AM, meditate, and drink a kale smoothie without a single complaint. That’s not how real people work.
The point of a routine isn't to become a productivity machine. It's to reduce the number of decisions you have to make. Decision-making is draining. A good routine automates the small stuff so you have brainpower left for the work that actually matters. It’s a framework, not a minute-by-minute schedule.
The First 60 Minutes
How you start the day matters. The goal is to win the first hour. Pick one small, simple thing to do right after you wake up. Drink a glass of water. Stretch for 30 seconds. Make your bed.
You're starting with a small, undeniable victory. It builds momentum. Avoid your phone, especially email and social media. That’s just letting other people's priorities hijack your brain before your day has even started. The first hour is yours. Defend it.
Structuring the Workday
Unstructured days lead to scattered work. You jump between emails, meetings, and actual tasks, never fully settling into any of them. The fix is time blocking—creating dedicated chunks of time for specific work.
It doesn't have to be complicated.
- Deep Work (2-3 hours): Your most demanding task gets your best energy. Put this in the morning if you can, when your focus is highest. No notifications. No extra tabs.
- Shallow Work (1-2 hours): Answering emails, meetings, admin tasks. Group these together so they don't slice up your focus time.
- Breaks (15-20 minutes): Actually schedule your breaks. Don't just scroll on your phone. Get up, walk around, look out a window. The sweet spot seems to be about 90 minutes of focused work followed by a 15-minute break.