Morning Routine

Start your day with a consistent set of activities that prime you for productivity. A strong morning routine sets the tone for the entire day.

timer30-90 minutes

checklistHow to Do It

  1. 1Wake up at the same time daily
  2. 2Avoid checking phone for the first 30 minutes
  3. 3Exercise, meditate, or journal
  4. 4Eat a healthy breakfast
  5. 5Review your top 3 priorities for the day

groupBest For

habitsmorningroutineself-care

Try Morning Routine with FocusBell

Start a focus session right now — free, no account needed.

Start Timer — Free

Related Techniques

Evening Routine

Wind down your day intentionally. Review what you accomplished, plan tomorrow, and prepare for restful sleep. A good evening routine makes the next morning easier.

20-45 minutes

Overcoming Procrastination

Procrastination is not laziness — it is an emotional regulation problem. Break tasks into tiny steps, use the five-minute rule, and address the fear behind the avoidance.

Ongoing practice

Breaking Phone Addiction

The average person checks their phone 96 times per day. Reclaim your focus by creating physical distance, using grayscale mode, and establishing phone-free zones.

Ongoing habit change

Social Media Detox

Take a structured break from social media to reclaim focus, reduce comparison anxiety, and free up hours of time. Even a 7-day detox can reset your relationship with social platforms.

7-30 day challenge

Burnout Prevention

Burnout is not just being tired — it is emotional exhaustion, cynicism, and reduced effectiveness. Prevent it by setting boundaries, taking real breaks, and monitoring your energy.

Ongoing lifestyle practice

The Seinfeld Strategy (Don't Break the Chain)

The Seinfeld Strategy, also known as Don't Break the Chain, is a consistency technique attributed to comedian Jerry Seinfeld. The method is brutally simple: choose one important habit or task, do it every single day, and mark each completed day on a physical calendar with a big red X. After a few days, you have a chain of Xs. Your only job is to not break the chain. The visual streak creates powerful psychological motivation because humans are deeply loss-averse — the longer your chain grows, the more painful it feels to break it. This shifts your daily motivation from wanting to do the task to not wanting to lose your streak. Seinfeld used this method to write jokes every day, eventually building the consistency that made him one of the most successful comedians of all time. The strategy works for any skill or habit that benefits from daily practice: writing, coding, exercising, meditating, studying, or practicing an instrument. The critical requirements are that you choose only one chain to focus on initially, you make the daily minimum achievable even on your worst day, and you use a physical calendar in a visible location. Digital streak trackers can work but lack the visceral satisfaction of drawing that big red X. Many productivity experts consider this the single most effective technique for building long-term habits because it removes decision-making entirely — you simply do the thing every day, no exceptions.

Daily — minimum viable effort each day