morning routine for successful men
It’s not about the 4:30 AM alarm.
Or the caricature of a CEO sprinting on a treadmill in the dark. A good morning routine isn’t about punishment. It’s about carving out an hour that belongs to you before the world starts making demands. It’s how you start the day on your own terms, not in reaction to everyone else's inbox.
That first hour is for getting your head straight, mentally and physically. It’s not about adding more to your to-do list. It’s about starting with a clear purpose so you can deal with the chaos that’s coming no matter what.
First rule: Don't touch your phone
The biggest change you can make is simple: for the first 30-60 minutes of your day, the phone doesn't exist.
The moment you grab it, you’re on defense. You're reacting to notifications, emails, and what everyone else is doing. Your agenda gets hijacked before you’ve even had coffee. Leave the phone where it is. Start with a clear head. Focus on your own priorities, not the fake urgency of a notification.
Move your body, wake your brain
You don't need a brutal workout before dawn. The point is just to get blood flowing and shake off sleep.
A 10-minute walk, some stretching, or a few push-ups and squats is plenty. It’s a simple way to get your energy and mood up for the next few hours. It’s the signal to your body and brain that the day has started.
I learned that follow-through is everything. One afternoon, sitting at a red light in my old Honda Civic, I realized I’d forgotten to log my morning workout in my habit tracker. The streak was broken. It was a small thing, but it taught me a lesson: the action isn't complete until you've recorded it. Now, I log it right after.