3 Powerful Strategies To Make Your Morning Routine Stick

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Are you committed to your morning routine?

BY CHRIS WINFIELD (inc.com) – Many very successful people credit their morning routines as one of the key ingredients in their high levels of achievement. People like Richard Branson, Tony Robbins, Gary Vaynerchuk, and more. Why?A morning routine makes you feel more productive, focused, and energetic. Coming up with one is the easy part. Pick various habits–such as reading, writing, and meditation–that will create these types of positive effects.

It’s the sticking with it, day after day, month after month, and year after year, that’s usually the hard part. But it doesn’t have to be that way.

If you’re ready to create the perfect morning routine for yourself and really make it stick, here are three very powerful and effective methods that can help you.

1. The Habit Starter Checklist

Rob Norback, founder of One Habit, tried to create a whole series of positive changes in his life and, instead of feeling better, he found that his stress levels went through the roof.

So after going through his own trial-and-error process and studying leaders in positive habits, such as Stephen Covey and James Clear, he came up with the Habit Starter Checklist to not only help you avoid the aggravation he felt but also allow you to create positive habits for life.

This checklist incorporates five actions, all of which start with an R so they are easier to remember:

  • Reminder. You won’t engage in your morning routine if you don’t remind yourself to do so, at least at first. Therefore, you want to create triggers that help you remember to engage in the actions you’d like to see yourself do in the morning. For instance, if exercise is in your perfect morning routine, then set out your exercise clothes and shoes the night before.
  • Routine. Norback suggests that you “make your habit small enough that you feel absolutely no hesitation in completing it,” thereby making it part of your daily routine. For example, if meditating for 30 minutes every morning seems overwhelming, start by committing to just two minutes instead. You can do pretty much anything for two minutes, right?
  • Reward. Celebrating your wins when following through with your morning routine can motivate you to continue to do it day after day, and the rewards don’t have to be big, either. They can be as simple as dancing around once you’ve completed it or even yelling “Hell, yeah!”
  • Rehearse. The more you engage in your morning routine, the quicker it becomes pure habit. This includes finding ways to continue with it even when life gets busy, and coming up with strategies to overcome any excuses that could potentially cause you to give up.
  • Record. Keeping track of your progress is a great way to make your morning routine stick. You can do this electronically with an app or online calendar, or you can simply make a note on your calendar on the wall, reminding you to review, on a specific day every week, how your morning routine is working for you.

2. The Bruce Lee Challenge

A second way to make your morning routine stick is by taking the Bruce Lee Challenge. This simple exercise was created by Travis McAshan.

Like the Habit Starter Checklist, this process has five steps.

  • 1. Create a routine-based goal. While most goal-setters will suggest that you create a goal that is specific, McAshan suggests that you keep yours “general and long-term” instead. An example related to your morning habit may be to simply get up earlier.
  • 2. Determine the objective of your morning routine. Now that you have a general goal, step two means coming up with a way to measure your progress so you know that you’re achieving it. Sticking with the example of getting up earlier, your objective may be to get out of bed at 5 every morning.
  • 3. Do it for 21 days. Some experts suggest that it takes three weeks for a new habit to form, so give yourself this length of time to make sure your morning routine becomes, well, routine. (Quick note: Many people think it takes longer to form a habit, so feel free to…

 

 

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