Why I Tried This
I have a bad habit of waking up and grabbing my phone like it’s glued to my hand. One second I’m thinking, “I’ll just check one thing,” and the next I’ve burned 25 minutes watching strangers explain productivity hacks I’ll never use.
And honestly, it made my mornings feel weirdly hollow. I’d already absorbed everyone else’s opinions before I’d formed my own thoughts.
So I ran a tiny experiment: 10 days of journaling instead of morning scrolling. No app switching, no fancy routine, no “perfect morning ritual” nonsense. Just pen, paper, and a promise to stop poisoning my brain before breakfast.
What I Replaced
My usual morning scroll was roughly 20 to 40 minutes. Some days it was news, some days social media, some days a bizarre mix of memes, emails, and “quick” replies that somehow turned into a full conversation.
I replaced that with 10 minutes of journaling.
Not 10 pages. Not a diary entry worthy of a memoir. Just a simple structure:
- 3 things I’m thinking about
- 1 thing I need to do today
- 1 thing I’m avoiding
- 1 line on how I want to feel
That’s it. Simple enough that I couldn’t negotiate with myself about it.
Day 1 Felt Stupid
The first morning felt awkward. I sat there staring at the page like it owed me something.
And my brain, which is apparently addicted to novelty, kept whispering, “This is boring. Check your phone instead.”
So I wrote the dumbest, most obvious stuff possible.
- I’m tired.
- I don’t want to answer that email.
- I want today to feel calm.
That was enough to get moving.
The funny part is that once I started, the page filled up faster than I expected. Turns out my brain isn’t empty in the morning. It’s just noisy.
What Changed By Day 3
By day 3, I noticed something small but real: I was less reactive.
Normally, I wake up and let other people set the emotional tone for my day. A headline, a comment, a text, a random post — and suddenly I’m already irritated before I’ve even had water.
But journaling slowed that down.
It gave me a buffer between waking up and reacting to the world. That buffer mattered more than I expected.
I also started spotting patterns. The same worries kept showing up. The same tasks kept getting avoided. The same self-talk repeated itself like a broken playlist.
That’s valuable information. You can’t fix what you don’t notice.
The Biggest Surprise
I thought journaling would help me “be more productive.” That was the boring version of the benefit.
But the bigger win was that it made me more honest.
Scrolling lets you stay vague. You can borrow other people’s energy, opinions, and priorities without ever checking in with yourself.
Journaling doesn’t let you hide as easily.
If I was anxious, it showed up on the page. If I was avoiding something, it showed up too. If I was excited about a task, that showed up. The page didn’t care about my excuses.
And that was useful as hell.
What I Stopped Doing
I stopped starting my day in a state of comparison.
That alone was worth the experiment.
When I scroll first thing in the morning, I end up measuring my life against everybody else’s highlight reel. Someone else is posting their workout, their apartment, their business win, their perfect coffee setup. It’s a terrible way to begin a day.
But journaling gave me a different reference point. My own actual life. My actual priorities. My actual mood.
Also, I stopped saying “I don’t have time.” Because I did have time. I was just spending it on other people’s content.
That’s the annoying truth most of us already know.
The 10-Day Results
By the end of the 10 days, here’s what I noticed:
- I spent about 200 to 300 fewer minutes scrolling in the morning
- I felt less scattered before noon
- I made decisions faster because I wasn’t starting the day mentally overloaded
- I had fewer “fake productive” mornings where I looked busy but got nothing meaningful done
- I felt more in control of my mood
I’m not claiming journaling turned me into a monk.
I still checked my phone later. I still got distracted. I still had mornings where I wanted to throw the notebook across the room.
But the difference was real. Small, measurable, and worth keeping.
What Actually Worked
The trick wasn’t “journaling” in some vague inspirational sense. It was having a clear, repeatable structure.
If you try this, don’t make it complicated. You don’t need to write beautifully. You don’t need to be insightful. You need consistency.
Here’s the format I’d recommend:
- Write the date.
- Dump 3 thoughts onto the page.
- Pick 1 priority for the day.
- Write 1 thing that’s stressing you out.
- Finish with 1 sentence that resets your mindset.
Example:
- I’m low-energy today.
- I keep thinking about that unfinished task.
- I need to send the proposal by 11.
- I’m stressed about the meeting.
- I can handle one thing at a time.
That’s a real journal entry. Not Instagram-worthy. Actually useful.
What Didn’t Work
Some mornings, I tried to make journaling feel profound. Bad move.
The second I started aiming for insight, I got stuck. I’d sit there trying to write something meaningful and end up writing nothing.
So my opinion: don’t force depth. Start with honesty. Depth shows up later if it wants to.
And don’t make the mistake of writing for future you like you’re giving a TED Talk. Write for present you. Present you is the one who needs help getting through the day.
If You Want To Try This, Start Here
Keep it ridiculously easy for 10 days.
- Put the notebook where your phone usually is
- Don’t let yourself scroll before writing
- Set a timer for 7 to 10 minutes
- Use the same prompt every morning for the first week
- Don’t judge the quality of what you write
If you want, use this exact prompt:
- What am I feeling right now?
- What’s one thing I need to handle today?
- What’s one thought I should stop feeding?
- What would make today easier?
That’s enough to change the tone of your morning.
The Part I Didn’t Expect
The weirdest thing is that journaling didn’t just change my mornings. It changed the rest of the day too.
When I started naming what I was feeling, I stopped carrying it around as this vague cloud of irritation. When I identified the one thing that mattered most, I wasted less time pretending to be busy.
And when I stopped scrolling first thing, I had more mental room for my own life.
That sounds simple because it is simple. But simple doesn’t mean trivial.
Would I Keep Doing It?
Yes. Not perfectly, but yes.
I’m not journaling every single morning like some enlightened person who owns twelve beige sweaters. But I do it often enough now that it feels normal, and my mornings are better for it.
The lesson wasn’t “journaling is magic.” The lesson was how quickly your attention changes when you stop handing it away first thing in the morning.
That part’s huge.
If you’ve been feeling foggy, reactive, or weirdly behind before your day even starts, try this for 10 days. Replace the scroll with 10 minutes of writing. Keep it ugly, quick, and honest.
And if you want a simple way to stay consistent with habits like this, try Trider (myhabits.in) — it’s a clean way to track the tiny routines that actually change your day.