5 Morning Rituals That Help Me Win the Day (#105)

Morning Rituals

This episode of The Tim Ferriss Show podcast is a bit of an experiment. Most the time, I interview world-class people, and I ask them many, many questions to try and figure out what makes them good at what they do.

Many of you have wondered what would happen if I flipped the script and had to answer my own questions. In this episode, I decided to do just that and answer one of your most common questions: what does your morning routine look like?

What you’ll find here are the five things I’d like to accomplish within the first 60 to 90 minutes of an “ideal day.” If I can hit at least three of these items, then I’ve won the morning. And, as the saying goes, “If you win the morning, you win the day.”

Let me know if you like this type of episode by responding to me on Twitter (@tferriss) or Facebook. Please let me know if you want more, never want to hear this type of podcast again, or suggest another question you’d like me to answer.

Enjoy!

#105: 5 Morning Rituals That Help Me Win the Day

Want to learn more about morning routines from a world-class entrepreneur? Listen to my two-part conversation with Tony Robbins. In the episodes below, we discuss Tony’s use of cryotherapy, his daily priming ritual, and how to get out of a slump.

Ep 37: Tony Robbins on Morning Routines, Peak Performance, and Mastering Money
Ep 38: Tony Robbins (Part 2) on Morning Routines, Peak Performance, and Mastering Money

This podcast is also brought to you by Wealthfront. Wealthfront is a massively disruptive (in a good way) set-it-and-forget-it investing service, led by technologists from places like Apple and world-famous investors. It has exploded in popularity in the last 2 years and now has more than $2.5B under management. In fact, some of my good investor friends in Silicon Valley have millions of their own money in Wealthfront. Why? Because you can get services previously limited to the ultra-wealthy and only pay pennies on the dollar for them, and it’s all through smarter software instead of retail locations and bloated sales teams.

Check out wealthfront.com/tim, take their risk assessment quiz, which only takes 2-5 minutes, and they’ll show you—for free–exactly the portfolio they’d put you in. If you want to just take their advice and do it yourself, you can. Or, as I would, you can set it and forget it.  Well worth a few minutes: wealthfront.com/tim.

This episode is also sponsored by 99Designs, the world’s largest marketplace of graphic designers. Did you know I used 99Designs to rapid prototype the cover for The 4-Hour Body? Here are some of the impressive resultsClick this link and get a free $99 upgrade. Give it a test run…

QUESTION(S) OF THE DAY: What other questions would you like me to answer on the podcast? Please let me know in the comments.

Scroll below for the episode links…

Selected Links from the Episode

Pu-erh tea | Turmeric ginger | Green tea

If you like this type of advice and want more of my insider tips and tricks, as well as the latest of what I’m enjoying, please subscribe to 5-Bullet Friday.

The Tim Ferriss Show is one of the most popular podcasts in the world with more than one billion downloads. It has been selected for "Best of Apple Podcasts" three times, it is often the #1 interview podcast across all of Apple Podcasts, and it's been ranked #1 out of 400,000+ podcasts on many occasions. To listen to any of the past episodes for free, check out this page.

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christiangottlieb
christiangottlieb
8 years ago

I’m pretty sure you will add the “Wim Hof Breathing” soon. 😉

Very good tips as usual!

Greetings from Austria!

Steve Borgman
Steve Borgman
8 years ago

I’ve used the Wim Hof breathing method for my last couple of training runs, getting ready for the Chicago Marathon. Call it Placebo, or call it real, it was the best 20 mile run I’ve had in a long time!

Monkey B0y
Monkey B0y
8 years ago

Tim… if you can have a huge bill board putting any message, what would you put on it? And where?

Beaumont Miles
Beaumont Miles
8 years ago
Reply to  Monkey B0y

“Who do you listen to…?”

Louie
Louie
7 years ago
Reply to  Monkey B0y

Internet is still the biggest billboard so far

Dustin
Dustin
5 years ago
Reply to  Louie

If everyone has a billboard, then nobody has a billboard.

Rikk Hart
Rikk Hart
8 years ago

Tim, very much looking forward to listening in about 5pm to this. This is “exactly” the kind of topic I’ve been looking forward to hearing. Per your advice, I’ve been on a “mini retirement” for the last few months battling panic attacks and working very hard to overcome this challenge. And needless to say, my mornings haven’t been as fruitful as I would like them to be and they are in stark contrast to how productive my mornings were earlier this year. Thank you so much for “caring” about all of us out here in this world trying to be a better person and a more successful person in life. Blessings… Rikk

jussitarvainen
jussitarvainen
8 years ago
Reply to  Rikk Hart

Hi Rikk,

I worked with a client who had panic attacks and was prescribed to eat medicine to it. Now she’s enjoying her life without overwhelm, anxiety or panic attacks. She got permanently rid of her panic attacks and no longer has to eat any medicine to it.

Here are few advices for you but without knowing much about you I have to be pretty general here. The process below is completely customizable when you attend a 1-on-1 session.

There can be multitude of different “causes” for a panic attack and to my experience they often derive from over work and not giving your mind a break and a chance to relax.

Build Yourself Strong:

-A custom morning routine to fit your needs can be part of the solution

-Doing things that fulfil you physically(stretch/exercise), mentally (reading about a topic you are interested in), spiritually(listen to music, paint/draw, dance) and emotionally (meditation & breathing)

-Garbage out session where you get all the ideas and thoughts bubbling in your head and filling the space out on to paper

Breaks:

-50 focused work followed by 10 minute break and do this in 2 hour batches, after each batch eat something nutritious

-When your 10min break do something that’s completely different than what you were doing for your focus session

-End work early and have something fulfilling to do like drumming, surfing, mountain biking, socialising

MVTODO

-Minimum viable To Do list

-What 3 things can you guarantee to get done today?

-Give yourself only 3 that you know you can easily get done and give yourself a permission to not do anything for the rest of the day

-Once you get the three done you can decide if you want to do more

-It’s important to get back to winning and not be disappointed at the end of the day for all the things you didn’t get done which kills morale, productivity and energy

Cutting off the panic attack triggers:

-Something triggers your panic attacks. There can be a visual, auditory or kinesthetic trigger but it’s more likely an unconscious trigger that you aren’t aware of

-This trigger starts a process where you notice the symptoms of a panic attack and they start to increase

-We need to cut off the trigger so it doesn’t start this process and instead starts a different process like how good you feel when you get something done for example.

-NLP & unconscious recalibration are the most effective tools I use to get results for this part

Identity Recalibration:

-The biggest stopper in creating a new habit is that it’s not supportive of your old identity and if you don’t change the unconscious beliefs you have about yourself to support your new life, there’s a big chance the routines fall of

-Start noticing (write down on paper when you do the new habit) and rewarding yourself when ever you successfully do the new routine/habit

There’s a lot above and just one thing will already make a big difference. I recommend you get someone to take you through the process so you don’t try to do it all at once but slowly build up and insure that it sticks and becomes part of who you are.

Hope this helps Rikk. If you have any questions I’d be happy to answer 🙂

Scott Johnston
Scott Johnston
5 months ago
Reply to  jussitarvainen

Great advice 👌 Currently I’m ressetting myself (centring my chi)
Off with bad habits often & replacing them with good positive habits:routines. ☯️ Atomic Habits is the way imo but any advice on lasting the distance? No relapsing, again. Avoid triggers , people places etc.
I’m doing ok but any advice is welcome!
I’m a grandad & blessed so it’s time. ⚖️Time4 self love ,care & my health first💯
Thanks for any input folks

Rikk Hart
Rikk Hart
8 years ago

Oh and p.s. I LOVED your show on drumming! I used to be a professional drummer in the late 80s and I can say you did such a fabulous job in figuring everything out enough to do the gig with Foreigner live. Huge guts to do that Tim. I used to hang out with Kelly back in the day as he and I were on the same record label… You rocked it man!

Dom
Dom
8 years ago

Tim, have you ever considered evening rituals or even mid-day rituals? I think it might be really interesting if you asked this question too in your interviews. I read the book “The Way of the Seal” and it describes both morning and evening rituals and the evening rituals seem like they can be pretty powerful too.

Thanks for your awesome posts and podcasts!

Best

Dom

scottrb
scottrb
8 years ago

Weird question with nothing to do with this: What kind of shirt is that? I had one like it that I loved and the trickster god of old (the TSA) lost it.

Eric
Eric
8 years ago
Reply to  scottrb
Max
Max
8 years ago

Tim, if you are interested in bodyweight/gymnastic training and Ido’s work, you should definitely look into Coach Sommer. And probably have him on your podcast too.

riceleg
riceleg
8 years ago

Congrats on the TV rights.

Thanks to you Tim

– I have started making my bed (consistently)

– meditating more (than I used to)

– journaling

Love hanging – one tip for grip strength add these http://www.fatgripz.ca/ to your rig (Poliquin approved – http://on.fb.me/1OkuSpE). Towel also works and is good for gi grab training. (feel I may be telling you what you already know).

Completely unrelated but thought you would appreciate this: http://imgur.com/95hO0W6

On to drinking pee… oh no wait you said tea, thank god.

Sincerely,

Ferriss Fanboy #1

riceleg
riceleg
8 years ago
Reply to  riceleg

Oh, I have also started commenting on blog posts of complete strangers (like I’m doing right now) which I normally would have thought was only for lunatics.

Damn you and your charming ways.

Jeff
Jeff
8 years ago

Tim, I’d like to see if , in one of your upcoming podcasts, you or a guest can answer a question that has puzzled and perplexed me for many years. That is:

How does one balance Ambition with Contentment?

At one extreme you have pure Ambition. To have the best, do the best, own the most, to achieve, to conquer, ect ect …and at the other extreme you have pure Contentment. To be at peace with what ever you have, whatever comes your way, to “want what you have”..

This is a philosophical question , yes. One maybe for your priest, Rabbi, guru, or shrink, but as an entrepreneur it is a vital question. When is enough, enough? When am I just being lazy in the name of being ” content” or “fulfilled”?

I’ve posed this question to freinds and therapists along the way but most are puzzedl by the question, don’t really understand, or give a Hallmark Card answer.

Anyway, thoughts?

Cheers! ..Jeff

silverdmist
silverdmist
8 years ago
Reply to  Jeff

They talked briefly about this in the Brene Brown podcast with Tim. I also remember in the book: Emotional Awareness: Overcoming the Obstacles to Psychological Balance and Compassion (the book format is set as a conversation between the highly accomplished psychologist/researcher Paul Ekman and the Dalai Lamal) it is a good read. Slow at some parts, but I remember Paul talking about how he held so much anger for his father that he believes it was that anger that pushed him to be so successful and to author and pioneer so much valuable research.

That drive to be better than his dad and show his dad up is what motivated him to have more success than he believe he would have without that anger. However he also said it bleed into his personal relationships with his wife and daughters and he never realized it until he finally put that anger down.

I always believed you surround yourself with both people at a higher level then you and a lower level. That way you keep that fire and urge to grow but when you mentor and look back and see others who are where you were it help give some contentment and sanctification for where you have been. You balance your life with both a gratitude for where you were and how you have changed and keep a vision for where you want to be. Just my two cents. Good luck finding your answer.

Renee
Renee
7 years ago
Reply to  Jeff

Jeff, you should check out the book “I am Keats” by Tom Asacker. It’s all about exactly what you are asking.

Alex Tuggle L.Ac.
Alex Tuggle L.Ac.
7 years ago
Reply to  Jeff

There is a Universal truth found in Taoist philosophy, which states that Yin and Yang are the two primary forces found in all forms of nature, and everything visible and invisible contain these two primary forms of energy.

Yin is potential energy, or the seed of creation, which must be developed internally by waiting and resting and focusing on the root chakras or lower Dan tian umbilical nerve roots through deep breathing exercises and mindful meditation practices which deepen your mind body soul connection.

Yang is the complete opposite as it is “Active energy” which externalizes one’s own energy into creative projects and work related endeavors. Yin is the mother of Yang, so if you want to wake up in the morning, you have to fall asleep at night.

This is the very basic understanding of everlasting energy and Taoist fulfillment. When you seek to embody the complete integration of your Yin and Yang energies, you become a whole being, attuned to balance and knowing how to respond appropriately in each and every moment, with either a Yin breath or a Yang action, the right way will come naturally to you as you develop your inner sense and trust in your own unique combination of Yin and Yang energy.

Enjoy you practice! 😀

Jack Tyler
Jack Tyler
8 years ago

Thankyou Tim. This is great. I had a cringe reaction to the use of the word ‘win’ though. ‘Win the morning’. ‘Win the day’. I’m not doing meditation to ‘win’ anything. Who wants to win a day? Its just a bizarre notion to me. Maybe it’s just a culture thing, I guess a lot of people go for the whole masculine dominate seize conquer destroy approach to living

paulresumed
paulresumed
8 years ago
Reply to  Jack Tyler

I think that people have to define what “win” means to them. Some people feel that it’s dominating an inferior person or creature. There are people that believe it’s completing a challenge. Others feel that it’s dominating their weaker side. For me, it’s hard to find a word that describes this feeling. “Win” is close but the Japanese have coined a word that breaks down into essentially meaning “achieving a task without waste, only incredible strength and precision.” In English, it translates closer to “god-like.” This word is Kamiwaza. I meditate to reach towards Kamiwaza.

lehrskov
lehrskov
8 years ago

Enjoyed this, but thinking about it further I’m lacking a framework for ‘build your own’. What principles determines what things are ‘good’ to do in the morning?

I mean: given your list you could make your bed (10secs), drink a cup of tea (10mins?) while journaling (zero minutes extra), but forget to eat, shower and shave, leaving your house with your shirt on backwards and forgetting to wake up your kids?

Another thing I’ve wondered with these morning routines is how to work them when you are more than just one person (relationship, a family etc.) Thoughts here?

In any case: thanks for thinking and posting. Great stuff!

jussitarvainen
jussitarvainen
8 years ago
Reply to  lehrskov

Hi Lehrskov,

Here’s my 5 cents for a framework you can use for building your very own morning routine.

Most of the things during our day consume energy from us, right?

-Work

-Driving around

-Running errands like shopping

-Taking kids to school in a hurry

-Responding emails

-Checking social media

-Answering the phone

-Cleaning the house

So we consume a ton of energy, yet most of us forget to replenish that energy. Sleep is only a part of re-energizing yourself.

This is the framework I use with my clients to get them from being overwhelmed and stressed out to having more time, energy or focus to be present with their family, friends and personal projects to enjoying a better work-life balance.

MORNING ROUTINE FRAMEWORK: What needs to get done + Physical, Emotional, Intellectual & Spiritual

List the thing that you get done on a successful morning and do those after you do your morning ritual or make them part of it. You can also team up with your family and do these with your partner and or kids.

1. What fulfils your energy physically?

-Stretching & exercising for example

2. What fulfils you emotionally?

-Meditation & Breathing exercises

-Garbage out journaling to make space and get the mind clutter out of your head

3. What fulfils you spiritually?

-Surfing, reading a sci-fi book, listening to inspiring music, drawing, painting, dancing for example

4. What fulfils you intellectually?

-Learning something new that will give you hope for a better future (motivation) and help you achieve your goals such as reading a marketing book for example or listening to a podcast, audio book or online course.

You can leave some of these things for your night routine as well.

NIGHT ROUTINE

Here’s also a frame work how to build a night routine that supports your well being.

1. Play

-What do you consider to be fun? Do that. You don’t have to do it every night but make sure you get couple times a week in.

-This is probably the most effective thing you can do for keeping up your balance in life and energy levels up.

2. End Time

-Have a set time that you give for your mind to calm down before you go to bed

-If you’re like most people you’ve revved up your mind all day and it needs time to slow down the RPM. Most people make the mistake of going to bed with their mind running 100mph and then either won’t fall asleep or wake up in the middle of the night unable to fall back to sleep

3. Journal

Winlog

-Write down 3 things that were a success that day

-Get the garbage out that’s filled up during the day by writing out the ideas that have been circulating in your head

Different

-Answer this question: What can I do differently tomorrow that will make my day more enjoyable/successful?

-This will help you recognize HOW you can improve day

-This isn’t something you necessarily answer every day

START SMALL

It’s not about a 3 hour routine. 20 minutes is plenty. You can squeeze it to 10 if you’re really crunched on time. Start with one and build from there.

LEVERAGE

-You can combine these.

-Listen to music while exercising or listen to your favorite podcasts that teaches you things that will get you to the next level in your ambitions.

-Do the journaling verbally with your partner and or kids

-Figure out if you can exercise with your partner for example

Hope this helps. If you have any questions I’ll be happy to help out 🙂

Fayez
Fayez
7 years ago
Reply to  jussitarvainen

I have some questions for you. What is best way to connect?

Dmytro Voytko
Dmytro Voytko
4 years ago
Reply to  jussitarvainen

Totally agree with a need to re-energize ourselves during the day.
I help myself with stretching, pushups and meditation.

empresarionomada
empresarionomada
8 years ago

Hola Tim, thanks for this post. As I’m also a first thing in the morning meditator I found that is important to stick to this even if you do it for one minute. I learned from my karate teacher (Tsutomu Oshima) that if you have a planned time to do anything (for him was to make at least 20 katas daily) that if for any reason you can not do 20, do 10, or too busy that day, ok do one kata. So the same with meditation in order to have it as a routine, and always there are excuses, its too late, I’ll do it after my coffee bla bla bla, so in those days that your mind is fighting back do the minimum even a symbolic one minute meditation (which is good too) but never give up your ritual. Also about meditation and mantra I really suggest to beginners in this practice to start focusing in your breath, just use that as “your mantra”. Meditation is really easy, “just sit” and when the mind takes you other places come back to feel your breath again, as you said, this training of coming back is what will give results in focusing and knowing yourself.

peterbold
peterbold
8 years ago

Question in regard to this podcast: When do you start to have protein.

Questions for further podcasts:

If happiness derived from income stagnates at 6000 $ per month, what are your reasons to make more?

How is investing in companies making you happy enough to worth the reduction of personal freedom?

Where does your believe, that you should live in a monogamous relationship, to have kids, stem from?

All the best

Peter

P.S. Happy to hear, that it will be possible to watch the TFE in Europe

P.P.S 4 Hour Chef rocks – just re-read it

Ning
Ning
8 years ago

Great post .. lol Chinese it’s accurate though.

Thomas
Thomas
8 years ago
Reply to  Ning

I liked the attention given to 龙井茶, but he still pronounces 普洱 like a total 老外!

John Hoda
John Hoda
8 years ago

Yes. Keep the short form answer your own questions format as a tweener. 😎

John Hoda
John Hoda
8 years ago

Keep the segments of answering your own questions as a Tweener.

racerxx
racerxx
8 years ago

Thanks Tim, really like these “shorter” podcasts.

Also intrigued by Wealthfront; I like the concept but don’t like the overly-simplistic portfolio risk questions. It would be awesome if they offered something like Meb Faber’s “Ivy Portfolio” type of mix, with long-short, etc. Cool idea tho.

Julian Doucette
Julian Doucette
8 years ago

Thank you for creating this episode.

Ryan Biddulph
Ryan Biddulph
8 years ago

I have fallen in love with my icy cold shower Tim, per Tony’s cryotherapy routine. I’ve taken a 2 minute cold shower on waking for about 3 months. Fab energy booster. I also engage in deep stretching and meditation in the morning. My morning ritual sets the tone for my day. Being a blogger and author I need that boost to create daily.

I also toss in an hour of cardio to raise my vibe later in the day. Life is rituals, when you think about it. Successes seem to follow high energy and other folks seem to skip out. I recall when I started the day watching the news and scarffing down breakfast. Now I take an icy shower, meditate, stretch, and I wait until 11 AM because I have a 16 hour fasting period between meals. Yep, intermittent fasting. My mental clarity, my drive and my focus have improved dramatically while I have stuck to this ritual daily.

Thanks for sharing Tim!

Ryan

dr3wf3st
dr3wf3st
8 years ago

It might have been a joke but dude seriously, Dog Training episode. Yes please.

Colin
Colin
8 years ago

Where does showering fit into your morning routine (and is it cold)?

What and when do you eat (if at all)?

Very helpful,thanks

Tomer
Tomer
8 years ago

Do you still eat a slow carb breakfast, or does the tea substitute it? (as a kind of intermittent fasting?)

Chris Ferguson
Chris Ferguson
8 years ago

Tim,

Would love to hear a podcast about modern philanthropy treated with a startup mentality. Essentially, giving to charitable engines that will do the most good.

Best,

Chris Ferguson

Kevin Brennan
Kevin Brennan
8 years ago

“Open your mind, you savage” – quote of the episode!

Thanks Tim. A game changer for me was switching from being the “rush-rush to work” guy, to giving myself approximately 2.5 hours from waking to being at my desk.

It’s the most valuable part of my day: pure self-indulgence, starting between 5-5.30am and – by influence (yours, journalling) and coincidence (hanging). I get to work content, and utterly in charge.

Have recently incorporated Wim Hof’s 3 rounds of power breathing, soon after waking, since I’m battling with always waking grumpy and confused. Some days, I’ll immediately walk outside for 5 minutes or so doing 5 minutes of power breathing. Both immediately kick the mind into a great place. And help with focus, and cravings tend to be weaker on those days.

In fact, sleep – the waking grumpy and confused aspect despite being a healthy positive person – would be a topic it would be great to have you dive into on the podcast.

D.
D.
8 years ago

I’d love to hear more about the softer side of your life hacking, world conquering, learning mastering. How has your girlfriend and your new dog changed you (if at all) and what have you learned? I think that the soft side and the raw emotions from romantic relationships or caring for something that is fully dependant on you (baby, pets) is often understated in the mainstream and I would be fascinated by your response.

MelRoseWilliams
MelRoseWilliams
8 years ago

Tim,

What martial art would you recommend to learn, for a 25 year old female who has no athletic or martial arts background?

Deedz
Deedz
8 years ago

Krav maga. Thats not meant for scoring points. Its THE fight for your life martial art. Totally ruthless and dirty, but you win. Good luck!

Brian
Brian
8 years ago
Reply to  Deedz

I’d have to agree. Not talking down any other discipline, but for pure practicality and ease of learning, Krav Maga is the way to go in my opinion. Emphasis on avoiding a confrontation, defending and striking at the same time, with the goal of defend/strike/disengage/retreat. I don’t think my wife is too interested (that’s not her cup of tea in general) but I’m getting my kids instruction and they catch on to it quickly because it’s designed to take advantage of your normal reactions to physical attacks, so it’s not like your learning something that requires you to overcome your normal reactions to be effective.

Marino Polo Rivas
Marino Polo Rivas
8 years ago

please its very dificult to contact you , i understeand that you are a very busy person . but if would be a way to contact you personaly , with small email or any other way , i need help urgently ,really , i know this could seems extrange , but im in a very destructive familiar relation and dependance , and i got very much anxiety , depresion , and is dificult to me to get focus on anything , couse the destructive reñation from my childhood . even get sleep and get a work has been dificult in the lastest months . i pray for any help consueling in spain or a half journy job here in spain or in UU.EE amd a room by rent or any family who need help for ropm or any exit. i want to rescue my life and be a musician , is my dream , i play piano and guitar by hearing on a amateur lebel . please any advise . thanks

Marino polo from Madrid , Spain

im desperate

oliviajanewhite
oliviajanewhite
8 years ago

enjoyed this, but as someone who listens to most of your podcasts, this was mostly repeat content for me. The ‘hanging’ part I hadn’t heard though.

Charles Celano
Charles Celano
8 years ago

Tim, this was yet another awesome podcast from you loaded with great bits of advice. Thank you for doing it and bring us more please. My question is “What about breakfast?” Does it happen after these 5 things are accomplished?

Elaina Love
Elaina Love
8 years ago

I love this podcast! Tim, please keep sharing your insights and routines…what you eat daily, what you do for relaxation, etc. It’s interesting and insightful to know what you do daily (even your screw-ups!)

Thanks for all your podcasts! I’m loving them!!!!

Elaina

Piotr
Piotr
8 years ago

Tim , your content is excellent.

However I have one suggestion.

Could you summarize your podcast in a few paragraphs. So we could get the essence of what you are sharing without having to listen to the whole podcast. Brendon Burchard does it beautifully with his videos on his blog.

It’s for people who would rather read than listen.

Thank you

Alberto
Alberto
8 years ago

Here’s how Albert Hofmann (LSD chemist, died at 102) did inversions: http://www.lsd.virtuale.org/img4.gif

Tim, what about inversion yoga poses for the ones that can’t install equipment? Maybe they do not decompress like hanging.

emfenton
emfenton
8 years ago
Reply to  Alberto

Alberto.. try simple downward facing dog. Love that for a about 15 breaths first thing in the morning.

Chris
Chris
8 years ago
Reply to  Alberto

Alberto, I was wondering the same thing in regards to yoga poses, although I was wondering about child’s pose, or “back flat on floor with knees elevated/legs resting on a couch”. Might not straighten things out like hanging , but it might give the discs a rest from the one-two punch of gravity and poor posture if that’s what was meant by “spinal compression”?

Alberto
Alberto
8 years ago
Reply to  Chris

Thanks Chris. I don’t practice yoga but I will try the back flat on floor pose as I am having low back pain.

Danielle
Danielle
8 years ago

Hey Tim,

My question for you is how has having a girlfriend and a dog changed you and your life (if at all)? I think so often the ‘soft’ side of things, the raw emotions of care and love from a romantic relationship or from having a something completely dependent on you (babies, pets) gets overlooked in terms of the positive impact they can potentially have on productivity and living a meaningful life. Any thoughts on that?

D.
D.
8 years ago

Hey Tim,

My question for you is how has having a girlfriend and a dog changed you and your life (if at all)? I think so often the ‘soft’ side of things, the raw emotions of care and love from a romantic relationship or from having a something completely dependent on you (babies, pets) gets overlooked in terms of the positive impact they can potentially have on productivity and living a meaningful life. Any thoughts on that?

teresapitman
teresapitman
8 years ago

Doesn’t anybody have children or dogs or anything?

Colin Ashley
Colin Ashley
8 years ago

When you say, that you most of the time interview ‘World Class People’ please clarify, What makes you the Judge of who is World Class and Who Is Not? There are many people who work hard every day, just to get out of bed and sort out the kids, the dog, the school uniforms, etc, maybe after they’ve only been in bed for a few hours after doing a night shift.

I know we all have a chance to improve our lives, even if its only by very small steps, but lets not forget the 5% who struggle to find the time to breathe, never mind philosophise ……

Stewart
Stewart
8 years ago

What was your worst ( and I mean most HORRIFIC..) hangover. What was it so bad and what’s your standard hangover cure.?

Also- have you ever been in a fight? If so, who with?why? And did you win?

I’m a big fan mate,keep up the good work 🔥🔥

Jennifer
Jennifer
8 years ago

If you were an expert on something of potential interest to a well educated, reasonably sophisticated audience you were starting an information business right now, how would you do it, how would you find your market and how would you market it?

Dan Turner
Dan Turner
8 years ago

Tim, given your love of finding the right equipment to overcome life’s little challenges. I would love to hear your top recommendations on best travel pillows (similar to your recent post on Sleep Master Sleep Mask). I have tried so many, and still can’t find the right one. Hope you can hack this one. Cheers Dan

Damo
Damo
8 years ago

Nice shorter version Tim,love your work and whole outlook on life.

Honest feedback though, nowadays I feel myself trying to interpret if your work is product placement/sponsorship or the true genuine Tim Ferriss advice on ideas that work……Maybe I shouldn’t care and maybe I don’t, I just think it spoils the authenticity of you and your brand and is probably worth considering as you move forward…….I think your strength is how genuine you are – don’t lose that 😄

Karina Palyutina
Karina Palyutina
8 years ago

Hey Tim – thanks for this, a much needed reminder that routines are helpful. Hanging sounds like fun, will have to try! Easy question: do you wake up at the same time every day? When I’m not up when intended whole day goes berserk.

emfenton
emfenton
8 years ago

For meditation, I really like chopracentermeditation.com. I use the energy of attraction/grace/relationships bundle as a package discount and it’s much less expensive than TM. It seems to be similarly set up as well, Oprah & Deepak give a little schpeal for a few minutes, then give you a mantra for the next 15-20 minute meditation, but none of the guru thing. I love it! Also, growing up in a brit household, this tea thing is atrocious. 😉

allgoodfound
allgoodfound
8 years ago
Reply to  emfenton

Or, if someone is unable to learn Transcendental Meditation because of the rather hefty course fee, I recommend you to take a look at NSR or Dr. Patricia Carrington’s CSM, both developed out of Transcendental Meditation – http://www.allgoodfound.com/2014/01/transcendental-meditation-and-the-alternatives.html.

joshgreenbaum
joshgreenbaum
8 years ago

Great episode, thanks for sharing your habits. I did the Headspace meditation today and it was a perfect way to ease into the day! These short form podcasts are a nice balance to your long form interviews.

Pavel Kogan
Pavel Kogan
8 years ago

Hi Tim,

Can you give a link to admiral college speech about doing a bed first thing in the morning?

Stephen
Stephen
8 years ago
Reply to  Pavel Kogan

Pavel,

The speech is here: https://youtu.be/pxBQLFLei70?t=4m40s

Enjoy!

Chris
Chris
8 years ago

The “Historical Atlas of World Mythology” series is crazy good, but there is some terrifying stuff in there (some of the fertility cult bits, can’t remember which volume, made me EXTREMELY happy to live in this era/location).

About the hanging, I really like Ido’s stuff but I’m concerned about the recommendations regarding passive hanging. This may be broscience, but I’d always heard that passive hangs put a lot of direct weight onto the shoulder ligaments, which was Potentially Bad. Most of the stuff on hanging seems to recommend the active hang with retracted shoulders and tightened abs/butt.

Meanwhile, Ido’s recommending up to 7 minutes a day of passive (for people *with* shoulder pain, no less), specifically to promote adaptation of that tissue in addition to realignment. I know he’s pretty results-based rather than theory, but I would like more information on this one. There’s a lot of TERRIBLE info out there one way or another about the adaptability of tendon/ligament health and it is hard to sort fact from potential fact from fiction.

Gaber
Gaber
8 years ago

You are my absolutely favourite best author of books andI also like your podcasts 🙂

Good luck in whole life

Greetings form Slovakia 🙂

André
André
8 years ago

Great Post again! Thanks for your Time and effort.

I have quite similar Morning Routine and i have one extra advice and one question:

The extra advice is: for making your bed, buy a nice overbed day-blanket and some nice day-pillows. This really brought the fun into making my bed and it is like a Small ritual now and looks way cooler.

Also brought me some laughs from Girls because the day pillows have some cute Owls on it.

Not that manly but i love them.

The question is: when missing out on some of the morning routine steps Do you also have the feeling of getting chased by the steps during the day?

When i couldnt manage to meditate or to journal, i have the strong urge to fetch it later in the day, mostly in the Evening.

So there is kind of a reversed effect: this what should be only good, can cause some bad Conscience during The day if missed out on in The Morning.

Would love to hear if anyone experienced a similar Thing.

Best wishes, André

Laura S Conner
Laura S Conner
8 years ago

You are my alter ego on caffeine….I love this!!!!! Please continue.I am an information junkie and interminally curious about millions of issues and facts.You feed my addiction….for more, and more…and yet more.

barman
barman
8 years ago

I would love it if I could listen to your podcasts in twice the speed like YouTube =(

JeffL
JeffL
8 years ago
Reply to  barman

Try an app like PocketCasts. I listen to all my podcasts at 1.5x speed.

icephas
icephas
8 years ago

Thank you for sharing Tim. On the meditation part, by my own experience, meditation is effective when you fill your mind with good things. Emptiness only brings nothing. Just a thought.

Ma Free Chi
Ma Free Chi
7 years ago
Reply to  icephas

The mind is already full and that is the problem. Meditation without a mantra can allow a person to sort out the thoughts, feelings and emotions that pull one from the present moment to the past or the future. What remains is a stillness that is goodness at its core and becomes a consciousness that is superior and beyond the thinking mind. From my experience that is.

Best

Paul
Paul
8 years ago

Tim – there’s another Tim you MUST have on the podcast. Tim Urban of Wait But Why. Best blog on the internet and right in line with what you’re interested in. I’d pay good money to hear the two of you have a conversation.

MattC
MattC
8 years ago

Thanks Tim!

Johannes
Johannes
8 years ago

Tim i liked the episode 🙂

Although falling for the tea haters seems not like you.

That somehow made the show less enjoyable for me…

Ah and btw “very unique” is quite a controversial wording 😉

greetings from Swabia

Oder besser gesagt dem Ländle 😀

Chris Scotto DiVetta
Chris Scotto DiVetta
8 years ago

inspired by you … I recently posted an article on LinkedIn that shared my first 60 min. [Moderator: link removed]

Thanks for helping me improve everyday.

Chris

Trent Wildrick
Trent Wildrick
8 years ago

I loved this podcast, definitely think you should keep them coming.

Great advise.

snehapa
snehapa
8 years ago
Reply to  Trent Wildrick

This is great. I had a cringe reaction to the use of the word ‘win’ though. ‘Win the morning’. ‘Win the day’. I’m not doing meditation to ‘win’ anything. Who wants to win a day? Its just a bizarre notion to me. Maybe it’s just a culture thing, I guess a lot of people go for the whole masculine dominate seize conquer destroy approach to living

🙂

jsnoshima
jsnoshima
8 years ago

Hal Elrod has some good tips as well, with his Miracle Morning routine. Been following his routine since I heard him on the Smart Passive Income podcast about a year ago.

QOTD- If you could go back to any time in the past, who would you visit, what would you ask him/her and why?

Debra
Debra
8 years ago

Hi Tim, thanks for your sharing. Is tea you breakfast? you recommend to take morning protein 30/30 rule. is it only for losing body weight?

Anneli Borlaug
Anneli Borlaug
8 years ago

I would like to know more about artists, how they connect to other artists in the same country and in other countries. Artists in Residence are for

proffesionals more or less. Is there any other ways to connect, meet and work together? Competition and “money talks” is boring. And so is artsnobbism if you know what i mean…

Secondly, any tips on Internet, computers etc for artists (painters). Is Apple the best brand for digital art? Laptop or iPad? Many questions 🙂

I am confused over the massive daily information. Instead of working, I watch Orange is the new black ;- ) But I love painting and I need some daily structure to get going. Thanks for good ideas! /Sweden

mapachebrown
mapachebrown
8 years ago

Nice Tim!!

I just realized I have been doing two of them for the past 2-3 years (bed+tea) I don’t really enjoy coffee so this is my recipe: Red Pu Her + Cinnamon + fresh Ginger + pure cocoa powder + coconut milk= Delicious!!

Quite difficult to meditate at 7:00 am while I try to get dress and leave home without waking up my kids (4year old boy + 1.5 year old girl) + wife in less than 5 minutes 🙂

So I will give a try with hanging , I used to hang with a “custom complex gravity system” on gym. I used the chin up bar and my feet ,don’t try this at home ;-))

Max
Max
8 years ago

I’ve listened to a lot of your podcasts and I love this one. It’s great hearing you go deep with your guests in interviews, but it’s equally fascinating and useful hearing you talk about yourself occasionally! It’s also nice to have a slightly shorter episode, just as another option, in case you have a spare 30 mins and don’t fancy starting to listen to one of the longer episodes. Thanks

Max
Max
8 years ago

I also think hearing your evening routine and sleeping pattern etc would be very useful!

Coach Kip
Coach Kip
8 years ago

Thank you for another great episode. My biggest takeway is to be more intentional in my morning routine. I love my mornings and usually am up early to get a few things done before my kids wake up. I have tried develop a routine organically but I think it is time to be very intentional.

Thanks again.

Weight Loss
Weight Loss
7 years ago
Reply to  Coach Kip

Hi Kip,

This has been my greatest takeaway as well – be intentional.

I think when you get to the bottom of a truly remarkable life, intention rules!

Jackie

Jeff
Jeff
8 years ago

Tim – I very much enjoyed and appreciated this episode. I’d love to see more from you in a similar style amidst the longer-form podcasts with guests.

Alex - Crik Nutrition
Alex - Crik Nutrition
8 years ago

This is great!

Making the bed is something I’ve never been into. Did it today and it really does start the day off with a sense of accomplishment.

Now to start hanging!

JeffL
JeffL
8 years ago

Love the short podcast and content. Thanks for sharing. I will have to try hanging more!

Bug
Bug
8 years ago

Just after listening to this episode I run into this article on making (or rather not making) ones bed:

http://www.theloop.ca/why-you-should-never-make-your-bed/?utm_content=buffer84445&utm_medium=social&utm_source=facebook.com&utm_campaign=buffer

Jason Paul
Jason Paul
8 years ago

Loved this type of Podcast! I think it’s strong to see how you have implemented influences from all the people you’ve met and books you’ve read to your own mix!

I also like the variety of length in content. Sometimes it’s hard to fit in 1-2 hours, 30 minutes is so much easier!

Had my first two Headspace sessions and starting making my bed! Do you even make your bed if you’re staying in a hotel? 🙂

Thank you!

Jason Paul

ProFreerunner & Vagabond

yfalkson
yfalkson
8 years ago

Awesome summary of Tim’s 5 habits for winning the day via @podcastnotes, for this and other podcasts from Tim and others

Zachary
Zachary
8 years ago

Would love to hear the top 5 but stopped listening due to the 3 minute wealth front plug….expected greater things out of this

vadim
vadim
8 years ago

i would compare meditation to this: mind is like a horse under you you pulling and pushing all the time, and in today world you mostly run; meditation is to let the “horse” walk by itself, eat the grass and feel the freedom from the rider…

Krystal Mae Araneta
Krystal Mae Araneta
8 years ago

A very good article. It is really necessary for us to start our morning right to be able to work the whole day. I just have to say and maybe add some advice. When you wake up in the morning we have to clear up the goals or plans for the whole day to be able to function well and don’t also forget a cup of tea!

Roselle
Roselle
8 years ago

Great podcast and very good tips! Thank you for sharing your morning routines to us.

Lenard Christian Apao
Lenard Christian Apao
8 years ago

I actually don’t make my bed, but that suggestion of a domino effect of task done, does make sense. Your 5 morning rituals are going to win my days moving forward!

Jessa Somblingo
Jessa Somblingo
8 years ago

This is a great help for us Tim who work long hours.I don’t do this kind of routine and I probably should give this a try. I usually have a tough day at work and whenever I wake up,it makes me think “Oh,I need to work again”.I think this would really help me to optimize my time at the office and maintain productivity all day long.

Nemanja
Nemanja
8 years ago

Great post! Wealthfront looks very interesting but are there similar options for Europe? One Wealthfront requirement is US residency and don’t fulfill that.

Vernon Castlebury
Vernon Castlebury
8 years ago

Hi Tim (or Tim’s team),

Not sure if you’ll see this (or more likely if one of your team will), but I don’t particularly like Twitter or Facebook so here you go. Anyway, just thought I’d offer you a bit of feedback on your frequently suggested correlation between meditation and success.

Let me preface it by saying I love what you do, I think meditation is a valuable exercise, and I don’t think there’s anything wrong with discussing it. I do, however, think a test/data guy like yourself may benefit from stepping back and looking at what’s really happening. Meditation is very “vogue” these days, and while that certainly isn’t a bad thing I think its powers are often overstated. I say this as someone who likes to meditate and is interested in the practice.

Anyway, in this and other episodes you mention that “over 70%” of the people you interview say they practice meditation, therefore linking it to success. This is an erroneous conclusion for a number of reasons (I won’t even discuss correlation does not equal causation), which I’ll just list:

1) Over 70% of your guests (that you asked) have danced around saying someone comes to mind when you say the word “punchable.” Does this mean your guests are just pacifists? Or that they want to project a certain image to your many listeners? I’d wager the latter. Isn’t it likely the meditation question is the same?

2) Of the 70% that say they have at one time meditated, remarkably few of them say they keep up with it or have it as part of a daily routine. Many mention they should do it more often, or do not do it as often as they would like. In other words, meditation was a passing phase for many, and this seems to be the case for the majority of people who non-religiously practice it (see what I did there).

3) Over 70% of your guests are white males (presumably heterosexual and from the West). This likely is the primary reason behind their success and motivation for meditation. You could also ask questions like, did you have access to education? Did your parents encourage your development? Do you like reading? Have you been arrested? Do you like going to the movies? Do you like The Beatles? With any of these questions you’d end up with an answer that overwhelmingly swings one way, because people from the demographics you interview generally all have these things in common. Singling out meditation is a bit of a stretch.

There’s other reasons but for brevity’s sake I think those are sufficient. I say all this not to discount meditation or your assertion that it is important, but instead to encourage you as someone who has done such an excellent job of questioning and testing status quo’s to challenge your own assumptions.

Meditation I’ve focused on here but really this could apply to many things in the podcast. I love your podcast and your ideas, but I think perhaps many of your questions and their answers echoed across your participants have basically reinforced notions you and your listeners already held. Thus perhaps chances to learn are lost in mutual appeasement, and now 100 episodes in I feel like I hear a lot of the same things over and over (I’ve listened since episode #1). Perhaps it would be beneficial to have some people on the show who disagree about the benefits of meditation or other things you usually cultivate. Could be an interesting debate at least. For instance the episode with Glen Beck held some real interesting nuggets primarily just from being so different in many ways from most of your other guests.

Anyway, just one man’s thoughts. Perhaps I am in the minority of your listeners, and perhaps you won’t see this anyway. If you do though thanks for all that you do. I credit you with many of my favorite aspects of my current self. Hope you have a great day!

JB
JB
8 years ago
Ian
Ian
8 years ago

Hey Tim! So these are 5 rituals that help you engage the day. In my case I find it just as important, to be able to disengage the day, right?… Would you elaborate on your rituals/hacks/habits for doing so? Kind of your ‘sunset rituals’…

Thanks!

Manuel M Urquiza
Manuel M Urquiza
8 years ago

How can I open and save an article as MP3, if I have an iPad.????

Ther is no Right or Left Click.?????

Maria Maragudakis
Maria Maragudakis
8 years ago

“If you see distraction externally, you end up creating an internally distracted state.” – Tim Ferriss

in my experience, it seems to be the other way round… If there is an internally distracted state inside, then distraction is seen externally, with more or less delay… The energies of confusion that are brewing inside, are radiating and showing up in the visible world.

P.S. I don`t know nor remember “what Fonzie was like” please help.

Tyler Hogan
Tyler Hogan
8 years ago

Great podcast Tim.

I noticed a significant increase in my productivity and overall happiness when I started to wake up earlier and immediately begin completing small tasks (making the bed, eating a healthy breakfast, etc).

tom
tom
8 years ago

Hi Tim,

In the Four Hour Body, you mention that eating breakfast within 30 minutes of waking is a critical success factor with the slow-card diet.

So, wondering if you still advocate that? – and if so, how does one make a slow-card breakfast as well as follow the advice in this podcast?

Thanks,

Tom

Darrell
Darrell
8 years ago

Any reason you now use a press versus a cup or pot with a basket to brew tea?

Kiraz S.
Kiraz S.
8 years ago

Great episode! For starters, I always wanted to say this: I love your theme music. Whoever made it did a great job! I am a Deep House/ Tropical House/ Electro music listener and a huge Daft Punk fan. Your theme music is right on target for me and for the kind of subjects you talk about here. Innovative and futuristic.

On another note, I once read that “you don’t dress up the way you feel, you feel the way you dress up.” It is true for me. Hanging out in baggy sweat pants is not my thing. If I’m casually dressed up after I make my bed, I feel more collected and productive.

You mentioned tv distracts you when you talk about something. I am the same way. I am easily distracted by so many things. Have you ever heard of something called HSP (Highly Sensitive Person)? I read a couple of books on HSPs. I don’t want to keep my post too long, so I just want to say if you’ve never heard of it, you may want to google it.

Here is a question: How do you cope with problematic people? How do you stop egoistic, miserable people get to you? I would like to hear what goes on in your mind when you are disappointed with people.

Meawww (translation: thank you! ) 🙂

Florian
Florian
8 years ago

Thanks for sharing your start of the day. Regarding green tea I can recommand the green tea of the Boston Tea Campaign.

It’s very mild and has very high concentration of polyphenols. This way I drink a tasty and healthy tea.

Emma
Emma
8 years ago

Really appreciate the short episode and advice provided. More podcasts like this one would be great.

Chris
Chris
8 years ago

I have a question.

I really want to meditate more and constitutionally.

Lets say you go out one night with friends have a few drinks then stay over at a place that is not yours.

What, should and how can you meditate in the morning at that persons place.

Any help would be appreciated thanks.

Kim Ethridge
Kim Ethridge
8 years ago

Greetings, Tim! Thank you for this podcast. I loved it! I’m definitely interested in hearing more like this. I’m working on getting my own morning rituals established and this gave me much to think about. Namaste.

Attila Szigeti
Attila Szigeti
8 years ago

. The new podcast format is great. Keep it. And besides morning rituals, also ask about evening rituals. Equally important 🙂

Brian
Brian
8 years ago

You mentioned a great idea for a portable kettle bell in you podcast by using a dry bag and filling it with water. As someone who travels for work I think this is a great idea because hotel gyms usually don’t have them and the one handle I saw that can attach to dumbbells probably wouldn’t make it through TSA on a carryon bag. Can you tell me what dry bag you use and what do you use for a handle (the dry bags I’ve seen don’t seem like they would have a handle you can use or if it did it would be part of the clip holding the bag sealed and you run the risk of damaging it).

Steven Zhang
Steven Zhang
8 years ago
Reply to  Brian
kazimuhith
kazimuhith
8 years ago

Great post . Thanks some routine that you follow, man !

Kyle
Kyle
8 years ago

Just missed 100! 102 is ok!

Quickly, I am regular listener but find the length of the episodes and amount of info too much to process. This 30 min episode was perfect for my commute to work and left my hungry for more information which drove me to your site. Now I have clicked on several links, all good things for you my man. Thanks and please do more of these!

Dan Ryan
Dan Ryan
8 years ago

Hi Tim

Thanks for all your inspiring research and experiments.

I’ve been really enjoing your podcast interviews.

There is a man by the name of Ryke Geerd Hamer who really blows the modern medical world on its head with his approach to disease.

Despite people making him look foolish, if you do some research I’m sure you will see some goodness.

Would love to hear you interview this bloke.

Thanks again all the way from the west coast of Australia.

Joep van der Poel
Joep van der Poel
8 years ago

Nice episode Tim, your passion for morning routines was what got me interested too. As a long time listener to your podcast I have heard most of this before, but sometimes a little reminder is good for us.

James Clark
James Clark
8 years ago

Tim – just catching up on your podcasts. Love this format of answering your own questions. I’ve been listening to more and more podcasts and find I gravitate toward the ones which are around :30 minutes. I’ve noticed my listenership of your podcast diminishing over the past couple of months, not because of the content, but the time needed. This podcast drew me right back in. Thanks for testing and experimenting with your formats. Hopefully we’ll get more of this quick hitting insights from you. Keep it rolling.

Steve
Steve
8 years ago

Oh man, making the bed is a huge one for me to set the day in motion. That said, my girlfriend never makes the bed and is completely at peace with that. Makes me a little nuts! 😉

enzomucci
enzomucci
8 years ago

I like this short episode. Much better when the podcast is short sharp and to the point. For me anyway. Thank you

Samantha
Samantha
8 years ago

I just wanted to say thanks for this post. I was already a bed maker and tea drinker, but the other tips have helped get my mind straight before I start the day. I have always struggled with meditation, so I took your recommendation and started with the Calm app, which has made a tremendous difference in my success at beginning a regular practice. The links for the tea were so appreciated – I already had some interest in yerba mate, but was intimidated by the straw/gourd combo when my mornings are generally so busy. After doing a little research, I decided to go with the Cruz de Malta brand mate tea bags, which I brew with Tumeric Ginger Rishi tea, and it is absolutely delicious (sometimes I throw in some local/raw honey). I was an English Breakfast or Earl Grey drinker before, but didn’t love having to drink it twice (morning and afternoon) to battle against the sleepiness I always experience in the afternoon, and the caffeine spike and drop from coffee has always been too much for me. The mate is fantastic in both regards – no crazy caffeine spike, and no afternoon droop.

Austin E
Austin E
8 years ago

Tim,

Not sure if this already is asked below, but didn’t see it mentioned. Can coffee be a suitable substitute for tea? If not, what is the difference that makes/breaks it. While I do enjoy an occasional green or Irish breakfast tea in afternoons just to chill I normally am not a fan of the leaf vs the bean…