Most advice about morning routines is garbage. It’s written by people who don't seem to live on this planet. Wake up at 5 AM, meditate for an hour, journal your life's purpose, run six miles. Sure.
The point of a morning routine isn't to make you a productivity machine by 7 AM. It’s just about making fewer decisions before your brain is fully online. It’s about a predictable, quiet start to the day that gives you a little bit of control.
When you know what’s coming next, you aren't wasting brainpower on the small stuff. Your mind is just calmer.
Start the Night Before
A good morning routine actually starts the night before. Waking up at the same time every day—even on weekends—sets your internal clock and makes the whole process a lot less painful.
And before you go to sleep, do one small thing for your future self. Lay out your workout clothes. Put coffee grounds in the filter. Pack your lunch. It’s a gift to the person who has to be a functional human at 6:17 AM with one eye open.
The First 20 Minutes
The first 20 minutes are what count. Don't check your phone. No email, no social media. The world can wait. This time is yours.
The first few minutes after you wake up really matter. Start with something that doesn't require much thinking.
Water. You're dehydrated after sleeping for hours. Drink a glass of water first thing.
Movement. This doesn't have to be a real workout. Just stretch. Do a little yoga. Walk around the house. Anything to get your blood flowing.
Quiet. Take five minutes to just sit. Meditate, listen to one song without doing anything else, or just look out the window. It’s a small pause that can help you handle whatever the day throws at you.
I remember one Tuesday trying to force a new 15-minute meditation habit. I sat on the floor, closed my eyes, and promptly fell asleep, slumping over onto a laundry basket. My cat, Winston, seemed profoundly unimpressed. It was a total failure. But the next day I just tried for three minutes, and that worked. The point is just to do it, not to be perfect.
Tracking What Matters
Consistency is what builds habits, not intensity. A habit tracker app helps. The whole point is just to see your progress in one place. Watching a streak grow feels good, and it makes you want to keep going.
Find an app that's simple—something with reminders and streak tracking. Some, like Trider, also have focus timers built in to help you block out distractions. The key is to make it easy. If it takes more than a couple of seconds to log something, you're not going to do it for long.
It's Not About Perfection
Life happens. You're going to miss a day. But the all-or-nothing mindset is a trap. If you miss a workout, don't write off the whole week. Just get back to it tomorrow. You're trying to build a system that can handle a little chaos.
Your routine is supposed to work for you. If it doesn't, change it. What works for someone else might not be right for you. Play around with it. Find the few things that make your morning feel like it's actually yours.
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This article is a map. Trider is the vehicle.
Streak tracking. Pomodoro timer habits. AI Habit Coach. Mood journal. Freeze days. DMs. Squad challenges. Built by someone who needed it.