A Life-Changing Early-Morning Routine
By Michael Masterson
"I would have inscribed on the curtains of your bed, and the walls of your chamber: 'If you do not rise early, you can make progress in nothing." - William Pitt
When it comes to personal productivity, we all have the chance to have good days or bad days.
Good days are those that leave you feeling good because you have
accomplished your most important tasks. Bad days are those that leave
you feeling bad because you have failed to do anything to advance your
most important goals.
If you want to have a better life, you must fill it with good days.
The best way to do that is to organize your day according to your personal priorities – doing the most important things first.
It’s easy to do. Yet most people don’t. Eighty percent of the people I
know – and I’m including all the intelligent and hardworking people I
work with – do exactly the opposite. They organize their days around
urgencies and emergencies. Taking care of last-minute issues that should
have been dealt with earlier. Or doing tasks that help other people
achieve their goals while ignoring their own.
Doing first things first. It is a very simple discipline. Yet its
transformative power is immense. It can change your life – literally
overnight.
It changed my life. Several times, in fact.
I’ve used this amazing technique to write six books, produce a
record, and script and direct a feature-length film. I used it again
last year [in 2007] to write 350 poems – one a day, after I began on January 15.
And I am using it this year [2008] to get that book of poems published and to
write six other books (five business books under the Michael Masterson
pen name, and a novel with my personal byline).
MaryEllen Tribby is using this technique right now to write her first
book on marketing (which John Wiley & Sons will be publishing at
the end of this year [in 2008]).
It is the single best technique I know for change. And it’s the
fastest and easiest way to turn your life around if you are not happy
with the way it’s been going so far.
Doing first things first. Is that what you do?
Here’s what I do:
That’s how to begin a very good day!
I do this five days a week. And on weekends, I find at least two more
hours each day to devote to my top priority. In a year, this averages
to about 600 hours. Six hundred hours may not sound like much, but it
is.
Six hundred hours is 15 40-hour work weeks. That’s almost four working months! Think about it.
Here’s what you can accomplish in 600 hours:
Now let me show you how I organize my workdays to tie into my
long-term goals. Here is the exact schedule I followed last Friday [in March 2008]:
6:30: Woke. Dressed. Sprinted, walked, stretched, and meditated on the beach.
The first thing I do is sprint and stretch and meditate. This is
the most important thing I can do (besides eating well) to ensure a long
and happy life.
7:00: Showered. Changed. Went to my home office.
7:30: Revised two poems written last year.
8:00: Wrote a new poem.
8:30: Wrote 600 words of Sin, my current (and first-to-be-published novel).
9:30: Wrote 600 words of the marketing book I’m working on with MaryEllen.
10:30-11:30: Wrote an essay for ETR.
I devote four hours entirely to writing – which is one of my four
top priorities. About half my writing time is spent on creative writing
and about half on business writing. This reflects a balance that
corresponds to my current goals.
11:45: Went to the office. Trained in Jiu Jitsu with Marcel. Showered. Changed.
Jiu Jitsu is a hobby for me. It strengthens me, expands my mind, humbles me, and invigorates me.
1:00: Met with my assistant. Assigned tasks to her.
1:30: Luncheon meeting with AS.
2:45: Met with MaryEllen and Charlie Byrne.
3:30: Did a phone interview for Ready, Fire, Aim.
4:00: Met with PP to discuss real estate holdings.
I don’t take any meetings until after my midday workout. (I’ve
trained everyone I work with not to expect to be able to interrupt me in
the morning.) Beginning at noon, my day takes a dramatic change: from a
schedule devoted to my primary objectives to one that is devoted to
others’ needs. Most of the meetings scheduled during the afternoon, for
example, accommodate the wishes of others. They have time to see me each
day, but it’s only after I have taken care of my own top priorities.
4:30: Returned phone calls to GP, DT, and LG.
I return phone calls in the late afternoon. It’s not a top priority for me. It’s as simple as that.
5:00: Wrote two ETR briefs and a blog entry.
If I have a spare half-hour during the afternoon, I devote it to
an important but not urgent task… like writing things that don’t have to
be done by a specific deadline.
5:45: Reviewed and returned e-mails.
My penultimate task of the day is to review and return e-mails. I used to do it twice a day. Now I do it only once.
6:15: Planned the next day.
This is the last task of my workday.
6:30: Had a fitness workout with JM.
Feeling good about accomplishing most of my priorities, I often reward myself with a second workout.
7:30: Got home for dinner on time!
None of what I’ve said so far should astound you. It’s all good
common sense. It’s advice we’ve been giving you in ETR for years.
But it’s one thing to recognize a good technique and quite another
thing to learn to use it. Most people who read this essay will think to
themselves, “I should do that. I should wake up early and spend time
working on my dream.” They’ll think it, but they won’t do it. They may
get into the office earlier, but when they do they’ll probably turn on
their computer and read their e-mail.
People sometimes ask me if it’s really necessary to get up early.
“I’m a night person,” they say. “I get my best work done after dark.”
“Sure you do,” I think when I hear that.
I used to say the same thing. But I was wrong. And I think you will
change your mind if you allow yourself to experience the natural,
unbeatable advantage of doing your most important work when your body is
fresh and strong.
Get up early. Get to work early. Do your important but not urgent tasks first.
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This article appears courtesy of Early to Rise [Issue #2311, 03-24-08], the Internet's most popular health, wealth, and success e-zine. For a complimentary subscription, visit http://www.earlytorise.com/.
"I would have inscribed on the curtains of your bed, and the walls of your chamber: 'If you do not rise early, you can make progress in nothing." - William Pitt
- I get up early – never after 6:30 a.m.
- I get to work early – never later than 7:30 a.m.
- I spend my first hour doing a task that advances my most important goal.
- If I’m going strong, I spend the next hour doing the same thing. If not, I switch to a task that advances my second-most-important goal.
- I spend my third hour on another priority.
- Only after four hours of doing important work do I allow myself to deal with less important work and other people’s urgencies.
- Learn to speak a foreign language with moderate proficiency.
- Become a reasonably skillful ballroom dancer, with a good command of the swing, the fox trot, the salsa, and the hustle.
- Achieve a blue belt in Brazilian Jiu Jitsu or a brown or black belt in one of many other martial arts.
- Develop a decent singing voice and feel comfortable singing at parties.
- Write five 60,000-word books on a subject you know.
- Write and edit two novels or 365 poems.
- Write, direct, film, and edit a 30-minute movie.
- Start a multimillion-dollar side business.
__________________________________________________
This article appears courtesy of Early to Rise [Issue #2311, 03-24-08], the Internet's most popular health, wealth, and success e-zine. For a complimentary subscription, visit http://www.earlytorise.com/.
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