Building a Morning Routine That Actually Sticks
Most morning routines collapse within a week. Here is a calmer, more forgiving approach that survives real life.
MMaya Hollis<p>Most morning routines fail because they are built for a perfect day that rarely arrives. The alarm goes off, the dog needs walking, an email demands attention, and the elaborate plan dissolves before the kettle boils.
The fix is not more discipline. It is a smaller, more forgiving routine. Start with a single anchor habit, something that takes less than two minutes and asks almost nothing of you. A glass of water. Opening the curtains. Three slow breaths at the window.
Once the anchor feels automatic, let the rest grow around it naturally. Stack one new habit onto the one that already works, and never add a second until the first feels effortless.
The goal is not an Instagram-perfect sunrise ritual. It is a routine quiet enough that you barely notice doing it, and sturdy enough that a chaotic Tuesday cannot knock it over.</p><p><br></p><figure data-align="center" contenteditable="false"><img src="https://cdn.modulify.ai/image-styles/ef97f421286ba1e9406b5fc3da002361.png" alt=""><figcaption contenteditable="true"></figcaption></figure>