Hey, friend. Let me start with a story – my story. A few years ago, you’d find me in my car at 8 PM, parked outside the hospital, exhausted tears streaming down my face. I was 24, trying to finish law school, with my mum in the hospital, my grandma suffering from dementia, chronically broke and utterly burned out. My energy was zilch, my sleep was a joke, and I was running on caffeine and sheer panic. And when I say that I mean exchanging the milk in my mokka latte for an extra shot of espresso. I kept telling myself, “Just tough it out. Other people handle this, so can I.” Spoiler: I couldn’t. One day my body hit the brakes. I got sick, mentally and physically and realized something had to give.
That “something” turned out not to be willpower (I had tried forcing myself to power through – didn’t work). Instead, it was systems, little daily routines around food, movement, rest, and mindset that gradually put me back together. Seriously, systems, not willpower, saved my butt. I traded the 4-hours-of-sleep zombie routine for a consistent bedtime, the 3 PM candy bar for a handful of almonds and a walk, the constant study chatter in my head for a 10-minute meditation. These weren’t grand life overhauls or woo-woo wellness hacks. They were tiny, unsexy habits, but done every day. And over months, they pulled me out of burnout hell.
Now I feel human again – better than that, alive. And I want the same for you. So let’s talk about how you (a busy professional juggling Zoom calls, family, and that ever-present jabber ping) can protect your energy and avoid the burnout trap. I’ll break down some popular approaches (the good, bad, and ugly), share what science says about building habits that actually stick, give you sample routines to steal, and even dish on a few tools/supplements that help keep the focus and pep high. I’m gonna be the big sis I wish I had back then. Let’s do this!
Disclaimer: This post is based on my personal experiences and is not medical advice. Let a professional check your physical and mental health and seek professional help if needed. Of course I always have an open ear, but I am not a certified expert.
This post may contain affiliate links that are marked „*“. By clicking on them, I may earn a small comission.
When I was burning out, my first instinct was “work harder, use willpower!” As if I could muscle through exhaustion and depression by gritting my teeth. (Spoiler: that strategy sucks.) And it’s something I heard over and over again by other successful people… Here ’s the thing: willpower is a limited resource and by the end of a stressful day it’s basically as fried as my brain. There’s even a name for it: decision fatigue. The more choices and self-control we exercise, the more our decision-making ability deteriorates. Ever notice how after a long day of decisions, you have zero clue what to have for dinner and end up eating cereal? Yup, that’s decision fatigue in action(Which sometimes still gets me). Even President Obama famously wore the same few suits every day to avoid wasting mental energy on trivial choices, so I’ve heard. The man had a point, save your willpower for the big stuff, not whether you should do yoga at 6 AM or 6 PM or what to wear (it’s why I am building a capsule wardrobe).
This is where systems and routines ride in like the cavalry. As author James Clear says, “You do not rise to the level of your goals; you fall to the level of your systems.” When you build solid daily systems, you reduce the need for willpower. Healthy actions become automatic, not an inner battle each time. My mornings now? Autopilot. I don’t debate what to have for breakfast, food and clothes are already laid out and prepped the evening before, same time, same routine, go. No decisions, no draining my limited a.m. willpower. (And perfected to get me the most amount of sleep possible, 5 AM at its best).
Neurologically, this makes sense: habits live in the brain’s basal ganglia, which once trained will run your routines on autopilot and free your mind up. And each time you repeat a habit, you strengthen those neural pathways, making the behavior easier and more automatic. In other words, systems = your friend. They do the heavy lifting so you don’t have to rely on heroic willpower at 9 PM when you’re fried.
Maybe you’ve heard of programs like “75 Hard” challenge. They’re all over social media. The idea is to complete a list of daily tasks for a set time (75 days etc.) with zero wiggle room. If you slip up, you start over. It’s like the Ironman of self-improvement: no cheats, no days off, no mercy.
Take 75 Hard for example, it’s probably the most famous of the bunch. Here’s what that entails every single day for 75 days:
Sounds intense? It is. 75 Hard has been called a mental toughness rite of passage, and it will push you. I won’t lie, some folks credit it for instilling serious discipline and confidence in them. Sticking to a hard commitment can feel empowering. Checking off those daily tasks gives a dopamine hit of accomplishment, it’s like gamifying your life. (In fact, our brains love that little reward; each checkmark gives a tiny dopamine boost that reinforces the habit loop. And yes, the structure of a challenge like this can be great if you thrive under clear, all-or-nothing rules. It removes decision-making (remember, fewer choices = less decision fatigue!) you know exactly what you need to do each day, like a checklist from a drill sergeant.
But here’s the rub: Life happens. And these extreme challenges don’t care. Got the flu? Working late? Your kid kept you up all night? Too bad. 75 Hard literally demands perfection for 75 days. That can set you up for failure or even injury. Sports psychologists note that while the program pushes positive habits like exercise and nutrition, its “no excuses” rigidity can backfire long-term. We’re human, not robots. Missing one workout or having a single beer shouldn’t equal total failure, but in these programs it does. That mentality of “if you’re not 100%, you’ve failed” can really mess with your head and motivation. And for me, I want longterm habits and routines, not sprints in hope they stick somehow. So nope, not for me.
Experts have raised red flags about 75 Hard: two 45-min workouts every day can lead to overtraining or injury (especially if you start from zero). The all-or-nothing mindset can fuel anxiety or guilt if you’re not meeting the strict requirements. And forcing things like daily progress photos, while motivating for some, could trigger body image issues in others. Dr. Matthew Sacco of Cleveland Clinic went on record saying there’s little to no scientific evidence behind 75 Hard’s specific approach, and most success stories are anecdotal. Sure, some people love it and swear it “changed their life,” but plenty start and end up feeling like failures if they can’t finish. The more I read about it, the less I wanted to even try it.
I dabbled in challenges and honestly? I usually crashed and burned. One slip-up and I’d beat myself up and quit. That’s the dark side: these programs don’t really teach you how to be flexible or recover when life throws a curveball. And guess what life is full of? Curveballs. And I don’t feel that it is possible to keep these things up. As Dr. Sacco wisely put it, true resilience is about the ability to bounce back when something goes wrong, not the ability to be perfect for X days straight. But if you are into challenges and need the metaphorical drill sergeant at your back – go for it.
What about “6 in 60”? This is a similar concept I’ve seen floating around: you set 6 habits for 60 days straight, your own personal non-negotiables (say, “meditate 5 min, read 10 pages, no junk food, etc.”) and you aim to hit all six daily with no days off. The pros and cons are about the same. Pros: your habits, your rules (so you can include things that suit your life, maybe even gentler habits), and 60 days is a bit shorter. Cons: six new habits at once is still a lot. It can overwhelm you just like 75 Hard if you’re not careful. Miss a day and, depending how you set the rules, you might feel compelled to reset the clock, which again can be demoralizing.
Now don’t get me wrong, I’m not totally bashing these challenges. They do work for some people. If you’re a competitive, all-in personality with a relatively open schedule and you crave structure, you might crush it and feel amazing. But for a burned-out professional trying to heal? Diving into an ultra-rigid program can be like going from 0 to 100 and slamming into a wall. Balance and sustainability matter. In fact, seeing the popularity of 75 Hard, lots of folks have created softer versions (like “75 Soft” or “75 Medium”) to introduce moderation, e.g. one workout a day, or allowing one cheat meal a week. Because ultimately, building healthy routines isn’t a 60- or 75-day sprint; it’s a lifelong thing.
So if you’ve been beating yourself up for not succeeding at these hardcore challenges, give yourself a break. You’re not weak – the approach might just be too extreme for what you need right now. In my case, I needed a gentler, kinder reset, not a boot camp.
Am I saying not to do these? No. I myself do a 6 in 60 at times, but a tad differently. I do not set numeral goals for example. „Workout for 45 minutes, 3x times a week“, becomes „Move your body“, walks, pilates, gym, dance or running all count. „Read 10 pages of nonfiction and no audio“ becomes „Learn something every day“ by watching a documentary, audiobook, podcasts or yes, read a book.
Now let’s look at the science of habits.
So how do we actually create routines that last longer than a trendy TikTok challenge? Good news: behavioral science has some answers, courtesy of researchers and authors like BJ Fogg (Stanford professor, author of Tiny Habits) and James Clear (Atomic Habits legend. Yes, the book I quoted earlier, which you can find here: Atomic Habits*). These guys have studied why some habits stick and others flop, and their insights helped me turn changes into real lifestyle upgrades instead of yet another failed New Year’s resolution.
One of the biggest mistakes when we’re motivated to change (say, after a burnout scare or on New Year) is we go too big. “I’ll start working out 1 hour every day, cooking all my meals, and meditating 30 minutes.” Two weeks later, we’re overwhelmed and back to Netflix and takeout. Been there, done that. BJ Fogg’s approach flips that script: go tiny. As in, floss one tooth. Do two push-ups. Meditate for 60 seconds. These may sound laughably trivial, but that’s the point: make the habit so easy you can’t say no. It should require basically no willpower. Tiny habits don’t rely on motivation (remember, motivation is fickle and usually gone after a long day), they’re so quick and simple that you can do them even when tired or busy. And doing something is infinitely better than nothing. Plus, once you’ve started (flossed one tooth), you often think “Eh, I’m here, might as well floss them all.” But you don’t have to. Even if you stop at one tooth, you succeeded! This builds confidence and consistency without the pressure.
Fogg has a formula: Anchor – Behavior – Celebration (ABC) It works like this: Take an existing routine in your day (the anchor, e.g. brewing your morning coffee), then piggyback a tiny new behavior right after it. For example: “After I brew my morning coffee, I will do 2 push-ups.” Brewing coffee is the anchor (something you already do without fail), doing 2 push-ups is the tiny behavior you’re adding. Why after coffee? Because that’s a reliable moment, and you’re pairing the new habit with an established one, this is often called habit stacking. Over time, the coffee-pushup combo becomes a single linked routine in your brain (like hitting “play” on a playlist of behaviors. Neuroscience loves this: by attaching a new habit to an existing neural pathway, you strengthen it faster. I did this with my whole morning routine: Wake up, deep breaths, stretch, grab clothes, brush teeth, wash, toner, get prepped breakfast and lunch and put into bag, exfoliate, put on the coffee machine, get dressed, serum, pack coffee, moisturizer, do hair, do make-up, morning walk with water, commute while listening to podcast/ audiobook.
Finally, celebrate and I mean literally do a happy dance or fist pump or say “YES!” out loud. Sounds cheesy, but this is backed by research: emotion creates habits. When you feel a positive emotion after doing your tiny habit, your brain releases dopamine and basically tags that action as rewarding, making you want to do it again. Fogg emphasizes celebrating immediately, you’re hacking the dopamine reward loop. Even a little smile and self-praise (“good job, me”) can reinforce the habit circuitry. I used to literally give myself a mental high-five every time I had dinner. It felt silly, but darn if it didn’t help me repeat the behavior. And I still high-five my friend after every run together.
On that dopamine note, we are basically just fancy lab rats, brain-wise. If something feels rewarding, we do it again. As habits form, the brain actually starts releasing dopamine in anticipation of the routine when it gets a cue (Like how you start to feel good when you smell coffee brewing before you even sip it, that’s dopamine saying “oh yeah, it’s coffee time!” My favourite time of day). We can leverage this by building in rewards. This doesn’t mean a cupcake every time you exercise (that could backfire health-wise), but simple things: put on an episode of your favorite show only when you’re on the treadmill (classic temptation bundling trick). Or use a habit-tracker app or journal to check off days you hit your habit , that check mark feels satisfying (again, small dopamine hit)and the reason I love my second brain so much. Some people love the “Don’t Break the Chain” method: X off each day you do the habit on a calendar, soon you have a chain of X’s and it’s motivating to keep it going. Little gamified rewards like stickers, points, or telling a friend “I did it!” can all reinforce you to repeat it. There’s a reason we do that with kids, folks, and why stop as an adult. I personally gave myself permission to buy a new fantasy book only if I kept my nonfictional reading up throughout the month. You bet I wanted that book (I’m a little addicted, so guess who learned all week? This stuff works because it reduces reliance on raw willpower and uses our brain’s carrot (dopamine) instead of stick.
Honestly, at some point during law school, I had little chocolates in between the pages of my books as a reward for making it that far. And hey, I got my degree, right?
Imagine trying to eat healthy when your pantry is full of Oreos and you have to literally step over the Peloton to get to the couch. That ding you hear is temptation calling. Willpower alone won’t save you here. A smarter move: engineer your environment for success. James Clear talks a lot about this: make the cues for good habits obvious and the cues for bad habits invisible. For example, I wanted to stop doom-scrolling my phone at night and read books instead. Solution? I now plug my phone in across the room by 8 pm and keep a book on my nightstand. The phone is out of reach (invisible enough)and the book is right there (obvious). Result: I read and fall asleep on time, instead of losing 2 hours to Reels. If you want to work out in the morning, lay out your workout clothes and shoes by your bed (visual cue). Want to eat healthier? Prep some fruits & veggies in easy grab-and-snack form, and hide the junk food on a high shelf (or don’t buy it). Really, the amount of time I strolled through the house, cursing my healthy self for not buying snacks and ending up with an apple… Want to practice guitar? Keep the guitar on a stand in the living room, not buried in a closet. Remove “friction” for good habits (make them convenient), add friction for bad ones (password-lock your social media apps during work hours, etc.). The less your habit depends on an in-the-moment “good” decision, the better. You’re pre-deciding via environment. This has been huge for me . I’m naturally lazy (er, I mean efficiency-seeking 😇), so I’ll always take the path of least resistance. So I booby-trap that path to lead to better habits. It’s a lot easier to drink water all day when a full water bottle is sitting on your desk (and the soda is not in the house).
You’ve heard it a million times: consistency is key. But how do you stay consistent? One trick: put it on your calendar. What gets scheduled gets done. If you decide “I’ll exercise sometime tomorrow,” guess what – it won’t happen. Instead, make an appointment with yourself: e.g. “Workout, 7:30–8:00 AM” blocked in your calendar. Treat it like a meeting you can’t miss. This is the essence of time-blocking, which we’ll cover more in a sec. The idea is to give your routine a specific time and place in your day, so it’s not an afterthought. And try to do it at a consistent time if you can, routines sync up with our body’s natural rhythms. In fact, aligning habits to your circadian rhythm can supercharge their effectiveness. For example, if you know you’re mentally sharp in late morning, block that time for high-focus tasks or learning new skills. Most people have a slump in mid-afternoon (around 3 PM many feel that brain fog hit), that’s a terrible time for detail-heavy work, but perfect for a walking break or a casual part of your routine. I scheduled my coffee break for that exact time. By understanding your personal energy peaks and dips, you can slot habits when they’ll feel easier. (Night owl? Don’t force a 5 AM workout routine, do it in the evening when you naturally have energy. Morning lark? Seize that dawn!)I know, there’s this trend on social media that tells you to get up at 4 or 5 AM and basically do your whole day before heading to work at 9. But that’s not the best practice for everybody. I get up at around 5 AM and leave the house by 6. I tried to get to 4 AM, but I cannot get used to it and feel absolutely overtired by day 3. And then I get nothing done at all.
The key is sustainable consistency, it’s better to walk 15 minutes daily than to do 2 hours once and quit for a month. Tiny daily wins compound. James Clear calls it the “1 % better rule”, small improvements each day lead to big results over time. And hey, if you miss a day, don’t panic. Life’s not over. Just get back on track the next day. One of my favorite pieces of advice is: never miss twice in a row. Skipped Friday? Okay, make sure Saturday you do something. This keeps the “habit muscle” alive. And, schedule in rest time!
Alright, enough theory, let’s get practical. What could a healthy routine look like for a busy person? I got you.
Everyone’s life is different, so there’s no one-size routine. But I’ll share a framework (that you can tweak) which covers the bases: movement, nourishment, focus, rest, and reflection. This is a composite of what worked for me plus ideas from productivity gurus. Take what you like, leave what you don’t!
Morning (Rise and Shine): Mornings set the tone. Instead of jolting awake to a blaring alarm (still do) and immediately diving into emails (stress city), try a gentle but intentional start:
Mid-Morning (Focus Mode): This is when many people have a mental high, roughly 1-3 hours after waking and cortisol (your wake-up hormone) is up. Use this golden window for your deep work or most important task of the day. Time-block it on your calendar: e.g. 9–11 AM: Project XYZ focus time. During this block, eliminate distractions. Close email, silence phone notifications (utilize “Do Not Disturb” modes or apps like Freedom). If you’re in an office with chatty coworkers, maybe pop in earbuds as a subtle “do not disturb” sign, even if you’re playing no music, noise-cancelling headphones can save your concentration. Own office? Close the door. We have an open door policy at work, so if the door’s closed, it’s a sign that you don’t want to be disturbed. Do what works for you. But absolutely plan short breaks; your brain needs to come up for air. Every hour or so, stand up, stretch or walk to the water cooler (refill that water bottle!). This maintains energy and prevents that hunched zombie posture at your desk. Kudos if you have a standing desk available.
Lunch + Midday Reset – Take a lunch break. No really, step away from the laptop. A proper break actually boosts afternoon productivity (vs. eating hunched over emails which drains you). Try to eat something with protein, veggies and not super heavy on simple carbs so you don’t face-plant into a food coma. I often do salads with chicken or wraps. After eating, do a little midday reset: maybe a 10-minute walk outside or some easy stretching at your desk. If you’re overly tired, get a little eyeshut. This combats the post-lunch energy dip and gets your eyes off screens. I also sometimes use lunch break to do a mini digital detox . I’ll leave my phone and take a walk or if at home, sit on the porch and just chill without scrolling. It’s amazing how refreshing even 15 phone-free minutes can be, like a palate cleanser for your brain.
Afternoon (Energy Management): The 2–3 PM slump is real for a lot of us. Instead of reaching for a sugary snack or a 4th coffee (which will come back to bite you at 2 AM), plan your lighter tasks for this window. Do phone calls, administrative work, or creative brainstorming, something a bit more interactive or low-stakes to ride out the dip. If you’re lucky enough to have flexibility, a power nap of 20 minutes can work wonders (just don’t go longer or you’ll be groggy). Often I opt for a second coffee around 3 pm, it has a my caffeine which gives a gentle focus lift without as much risk to my sleep later. Also, hydration check: by afternoon, many of us are running low. That fatigue might be dehydration, so chug some water (yes, again). If you find water boring, try herbal tea or flavored seltzer, just skip the super sugary drinks that spike then crash you.
One trick for afternoons is to do a “transition routine” when ending the workday. It’s easy to let work bleed into evening, especially if working remote. Having a ritual like: clear your desk, write your top 3 tasks for tomorrow on a sticky note (so you offload it from your brain), shut down the computer and maybe even say “shutdown complete” (a cue Mr. Rogers style 😅). This sends a signal: work day over. For me it’s that deep breath on the way to my car and getting ready to hit play on my audio.
Evening (Unwind and Recharge): Evenings are critical for avoiding burnout. This is when you actually refill your tank. Here’s a template:
By ~10-11 PM (or whatever time gives you ~7-8 hours of sleep before your wake-up, for me 9 – 10 PM), aim to be lights out. Consistency here is golden: going to bed and waking up around the same time trains your body to get sleepy and alert like clockwork. When I started actually prioritizing sleep as a non-negotiable, my productivity next day soared and I stopped feeling like a bus hit me every morning. And, I am tired at the same time every evening. Funny how that works.
Feel free to adjust this daily template, not everyone has a 9-5 or no kids interrupting, etc. The key is to find a rhythm that includes breaks, nutritious food, movement, focus time, and relaxation. Even if your schedule is chaotic, you can create micro-routines. (E.g. if you travel a lot, maybe your “morning routine” lives in your carry-on: you always do a 5-min stretch in your hotel, have oatmeal and tea, etc., to create consistency amidst change.)
In addition to your day-to-day habits, it helps to have a weekly routine to ground you. For me (and many productive people I know), Sundays are the holy grail. Think of Sunday as your day to reset and plan for a smoother week. Here’s how a typical Sunday routine could look:
By implementing a “Sunday Reset,” you enter the week feeling more prepared and less chaotic. It’s like the difference between waking up to a tidy room vs. a messy one, one gives you calm, the other subtle anxiety. Weekly routines can also include fun traditions :Taco Tuesdays, Friday movie night, Saturday morning farmer’s market run, whatever gives you little anchors to look forward to. These joyful rituals boost your emotional wellbeing, which is just as crucial in avoiding burnout.
Alright, now for some bonus hacks. We live in an age where we have a gadget or pill for everything. I’m not saying you need any fancy tech or magic supplements to be healthy (the basics – sleep, food, movement – are first). But I have found a few tools and supplements that genuinely support my energy, focus, and overall wellbeing. Sharing my faves (and yes, these include a few affiliate links, but I only hype what I use and love):
Now onto supplements. Quick disclaimer: I’m not a doctor, and supplements aren’t a cure-all or a substitute for a healthy diet. But certain ones have solid research and can fill gaps or give you a little boost. Always check with a healthcare provider if you’re unsure, especially if you take other meds. With that said, here are a few that helped me go from zombie to functional human:
Remember, supplements are supplemental ,they add to a healthy lifestyle, they don’t replace it. Think of them as supportive tools, like a good pair of running shoes if you’re a runner. The shoes won’t run the miles for you, but they make the run smoother. And if you need special soles – get the supplements you really need.
I hear you: all these routines and habits sound great in theory, but what about when life happens? Crazy work deadlines, kids getting sick, vacations, sheer lack of motivation… Let’s tackle some common questions I get from friends (and that I asked myself too):
Q: What if I fall off the wagon and miss a bunch of days?
A: First off – welcome to the club! Falling off the wagon is part of the process. No one, I repeat no one, is perfect at their routine 100% of the time. The difference between people who succeed long-term and those who don’t is simply getting back on track. Don’t let a slip turn into a slide. If you miss a day (or a week) of workouts or healthy eating, the worst thing you can do is spiral into all-or-nothing thinking (“I missed three workouts, I’m a failure, might as well quit”). Nope. Next meal is a chance to get back to veggies. Tomorrow morning is a chance to lace up and go for that walk. One of my favorite tiny habits mantra is “never miss twice”. It’s not about never missing, it’s about cutting off the lapse early. And when you do restart, start small again to rebuild momentum. Maybe you got to Week 3 of waking up early then fell off, when restarting, don’t immediately expect yourself to do the full 6am workout. Maybe do a 6:30 wake for a few days and a 5-minute stretch. The key is to restore the routine first, then ramp it back up. Importantly, ditch the guilt. Guilt is not productive; it usually just makes you avoid the habit because it now has a bad vibe. Forgive yourself fast, and approach getting back to routines with a positive mindset (“I’ll feel so good once I’m back in my groove”). Remember, consistency isn’t ruined by one off day – it’s built over months and years. One of my habit hero analogies: If you get a flat tire, you don’t puncture the other three on purpose, you fix the flat and keep driving. Treat missed days the same way. And another thing that I found really helped me: regular audits. Yes, I have regular meetings with myself (usually summer, new year and when needed) and look at everything I am doing and where I could improve to live a better life.
Q: I don’t have time for long routines – what if my schedule is insane?
A: Ah, the time crunch, the number one obstacle everyone cites. I get it; some days you barely have time to breathe, let alone hit the gym for an hour or cook an Insta-worthy quinoa bowl. But here’s a mindset shift: You don’t need large blocks of time to build habits. Micro-habits and “habit stacking” are your best friends when busy. Can’t do a 30-minute workout? Do 10 minutes. Can’t meal-prep fancy lunches? Throw some nuts, fruit, and Greek yogurt in your bag, 2 minutes, done. Squeeze healthy practices into things you already do: do calf raises while brushing your teeth, or practice mindful breathing during your commute. Also, analyze your day for hidden time wasters, you might be surprised. The average person still finds time to scroll social media or watch Netflix; could you borrow 15 minutes from that to stretch or prep overnight oats? Often we do have time, but we’re exhausted so we default to easy, less beneficial behaviors. One solution: systems to reduce decision fatigue (like a fixed weekly menu or a set workout time) actually create more free time/energy in the long run. Yes, it takes effort up front to establish, but then it runs on autopilot. A trick I use on truly packed days: combine habits with existing tasks e.g. I’ll listen to an audiobook or informative podcast (Atomic Habits audiobook, anyone?) while commuting or doing chores, effectively stacking self-improvement onto necessary tasks. If you have kids, involve them, maybe family walk after dinner (quality time + exercise, two birds one stone). And remember, some is better than none. A 5-minute meditation in your car between meetings is better than zero. One healthy snack is better than none. Give yourself permission to do the minimum viable habit on hectic days. Consistency isn’t about perfect execution; it’s about showing up in whatever capacity you can. Over time, those small actions compound. If something consistently feels impossible to fit in, maybe it’s not the right habit for your life right now, adjust it to something more feasible rather than abandoning the idea of routines altogether. Also, that’s why I dislike setting numbers on my habits. I feel they limit me, when everything is just too busy around me.
Q: How do I keep routines when I travel or my schedule changes?
A: Travel and schedule changes, the routine-killers! I used to completely derail every business trip or vacation, then struggle to restart. The fix was planning and flexibility. Before traveling, I do a little research: Does the hotel have a gym? Is there a park or safe area to run? Can I pack portable healthy snacks or even instant oatmeal for hotel breakfasts? I’ll pencil in a rough plan like “Tuesday: hotel gym 7am” or “Walk to client site instead of cab if possible.” Not all plans will happen, but having the intention helps. Pack a travel habit kit: a refillable water bottle, some protein bars,yoga clothes (light and lets you do exercises in a hotel room) and maybe a travel journal to keep up gratitude or planning. For flights, I download audio or reading material in advance. Adapt your habits to the context: if you normally do 30-min workouts at home, maybe on a trip you just do 10 minutes of bodyweight exercises in your room. If you usually cook, you might eat out but choose grilled over fried, or add a side salad , small healthy choices. Have room for running shoes in your cabin bag? Go for a morning run to explore. Sleep might get disrupted by time zones; to keep some circadian rhythm, try to get morning light in the new location and go to bed/wake up on the new time as soon as you can. I also bring magnesium or herbal tea to help wind down in unfamiliar places. And yes, my warming eye mask. And if travel is for fun (vacation), don’t beat yourself up for indulging, just keep a couple core routines to feel good (like staying hydrated and walking a lot). The goal is to return from travel without feeling like you’re starting from zero. Have a “restart day” plan when you get back, for me, I plan my first day home to include a grocery run for fresh produce and a short workout to get back in the groove. Jet lagged me hates it, but afterwards I feel back on track. In short: plan ahead, pack smart, adapt your expectations (maybe it’s habit maintenance mode rather than progress), and resume normal programming ASAP after travel. You can absolutely be a road warrior and keep healthy habits. I know folks who do push-ups in airport lounges and use phone alarms to do breathing exercises on long flights. It’s doable with intention.
Q: I just can’t get motivated. How do I start when I don’t feel like it?
A: Oh boy, the motivation monster. Here’s a secret: Action often comes before motivation. We usually assume we need to feel motivated first, then we act. But psychology suggests the opposite can happen, if you force yourself to do something small, the progress and dopamine you get can create motivation to do more. So when you really don’t feel like it, tell yourself, “Okay, just 5 minutes.” Five minutes of walking, or write just one sentence, or eat one piece of fruit. Make it comically easy to start. 99% of the time, once you start, you’ll do more than you intended. And if you truly only do 5 minutes? Hey, that’s still a win and likely more than zero. Another trick: make it fun or add something you enjoy. Struggling to go on a run? Promise yourself you can listen to your favorite true-crime podcast but only while running, suddenly you want to go so you can hear the next episode. Or if you’re like me, include military running cadences in your run playlist. Hate cooking? Do it while video chatting a friend or play your favorite music and turn it into a mini dance party. Hate cleaning or gardening? Listen to your favourite party music during. Yes, I garden and clean to hard style techno. Also, remember your “Why.” Take a moment to recall why you want to build these habits. More energy to play with your kids? To feel confident in your skin? To crush it at work then actually enjoy your downtime? Visualize that end goal or feeling. It can reignite your drive. Sometimes I even read journal entries from my burnt-out days to remind me why I never want to go back. That lights a fire under me. And if you’re really in a funk, seek support: enlist a workout buddy or an accountability partner who’ll text you, hire a coach or join a challenge group for a short-term kickstart. Human accountability is powerful when your internal motivation is low. But bottom line: you won’t always feel motivated – do it anyway, starting tiny, and trust that motivation often catches up with action.
Q: How can I stick to routines without becoming a boring robot?
A: Haha, I love this question because honestly, I don’t have those worries, but I am regularily called an ice queen. In reality, routines give you more free space to be spontaneous because you’re not burning energy deciding basic things or cleaning up messes from poor habits (like constantly catching up on sleep debt or dealing with health issues). It’s a safety net. But balance is key. I’m all for the 80/20 rule: 80% of the time, stick to your systems; 20% of the time, live a little! Have that late-night out with friends, eat the cake at the party, skip the morning run to sleep in on your birthday, it’s all good. The whole point of having better health and energy is to enjoy life more, not to live like a monk. If your routines are so strict that they make you unhappy or isolated, loosen up. You might shift to a “mostly on track during weekdays, more flexible on weekends” approach. I personally allow myself Fridays as a wildcard day, if I skip the gym and go to happy hour, fine. I’ll still drink water in between cocktails and maybe dance (hey, that counts as exercise! 😜). And that’s where I have my scheduled doom-scrolling! The trick is to intentionally decide when to break routine for a good reason (joy, connection, a special occasion), and then intentionally return to routine after. One dinner of pizza and beer with friends is not going to undo your health; just don’t let it turn into a week. Also, periodically refresh your routines so you don’t get bored. Try a new healthy recipe, rotate a new playlist for workouts, experiment with a different meditation app, etc. We humans like novelty, my safe foods change all the time, you can keep the structure consistent while introducing small changes to keep it interesting. For example, I always exercise Mon/Tue/Fri/Sun, but I’ll try new workout classes or running routes to mix it up. Routine doesn’t mean identical repetition like Groundhog Day; it means a reliable pattern with room for variety and fun. So fear not, you won’t become a robot. In fact, with good habits giving you more vitality, you’ll probably find life more colorful.
If you’ve made it this far, cue applause. We covered a lot, from my burnout sob story to brain science, from 75 Hard to Tiny Habits, from daily schedules to travel hacks. It might feel a tad overwhelming, like “Where do I even start?” My advice: start small (notice a theme?). Pick one tip or idea from this post that resonated and try it out this week. Maybe it’s drinking a glass of water each morning, or doing a 5-minute journal at night, or implementing a Sunday planning session. One thing. Master that, then come back and add another. Rome wasn’t built in a day; neither is a burnout-free life.
But brick by brick, habit by habit, you will build a fortress of routines that protect your energy and wellbeing. And those “bricks” don’t stay tiny, they compound. Trust me, a few years ago I was a husk of a person. I started with just fixing my sleep and doing short daily walks. Then added eating a real breakfast. Then a bit more exercise. Then some mindfulness. Now, I’m thriving. I still have tough days (I’m human, and I still work in corporate, stress didn’t vanish), but I don’t spiral like before. I have tools and defaults to catch me. I feel in control of my life again, not at the mercy of it.
And you deserve to feel that way too. Your energy is worth protecting. Your health and sanity are non-negotiable assets, when you safeguard them, everything in life gets better. You show up as a better leader, partner, parent, friend, and you actually enjoy the ride instead of crawling through each day on fumes. Burnout is a sneaky thief; it robs you of joy, productivity, and health. But you can stop it in its tracks by taking consistent, loving action for yourself.
So here’s your gentle kick in the pants (delivered with love, of course): Take that first small step. Schedule a walk for tomorrow, or set out water and vitamins tonight, or call a friend and make a plan to hit the gym together – whatever floats your boat. And when you feel that resistance (“ugh, tomorrow me won’t want to do it”), remember you have a whole arsenal of strategies now , make it tiny, pair it with something fun, set a cue, make it a game. You have the power to design a life with less burnout and more balance.
Lastly, let me say: I’m rooting for you. Imagine me as that friend sending you a voice note: “Hey, I know it’s hard but you freaking got this! One day at a time, okay?” Because it’s true. Small changes add up, and you’re capable of amazing things – including beating burnout and feeling good again. Here’s to you, your journey, and the sustainable, healthy, and yes, sometimes sarcastic and hilarious road ahead. Now go forth and thrive, you’ve earned it. 💪🎉
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