morning, it would give me a positive motivational kick-start to my
day. I could learn something new in the morning. I’d likely be more
energized,
more focused, and more motivated for the rest of my day. I
remembered a blog post that I read on
StevePavlina.com
, titled
The
Rudder of the Day. Steve, also the author of
Personal Development
for Smart People, stated: “It’s been said that the first hour is the
rudder of the day. If I’m lazy or haphazard in my actions during the
first hour after I wake up, I tend to have a fairly lazy and unfocused
day. But if I strive to make that first hour optimally productive, the
rest of the day tends to follow suit.”
Not
to mention, by doing personal development in the morning, I
wouldn’t have all of the excuses that accumulate during the day (
I’m
tired,
I don’t have time, etc.) If I did it in the morning, before the rest
of my life and my work got in the way, I
could guarantee that it
happened every single day.
Finally, I just didn’t really see any better time to do it. Executing
my personal development first thing in the morning was looking to be
the most advantageous option, but it was already hard enough to drag
myself out of bed every day at 6:00 a.m.—because I had to—so the
idea of getting up at 5:00 a.m. seemed absolutely insane to me.
Feeling frustrated and a bit defeated, I was
about to close my planner
and forget the whole idea, when I heard the voice of my mentor,
Kevin Bracy, in my head. Kevin always told me, “Hal, if you want
your life to be different, you have to be willing to do something
different first!”
Damn it.
I knew Kevin was right, but that didn’t make waking up
early any easier. Committed to making a change, I decided to
overcome my self-imposed, life-long limiting belief that I was not a
morning person and wrote into my schedule
that I would wake up at
5:00 a.m. the next morning to do my first personal development
routine.