Start Small and Track Your Progress
When it comes to building a morning routine that you can keep up, start small – even just ten minutes – and build onto it. You don’t just magically increase your willpower or build habits overnight. These things take time. Pick a few habits that are meaningful to you and stretch a bit beyond your comfort zone consistently over time.
Tracking your progress will essentially give you a chain of successes and you’re not going to want that chain to break. When you look back on it, you will be motivated to keep up your morning routine in the future.
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Check for scholarshipsStructure and Test Your A.M. Routine
Try timing your current morning routine, from the moment you wake up until the moment you leave. There’s a good chance you’ve given yourself an arbitrary time span, like an hour, rather than see what your morning actually requires. Consider setting your alarm to an earlier time. Or think of some ways to make your morning routine more efficient – such as showering or packing your lunch at night.
Move Your Phone
Seriously, move it away from your bed, especially if your phone doubles as your alarm clock. Instead of constantly hitting the snooze button, keeping your phone/alarm clock at walking distance turns waking up into getting up.
Another benefit of having your phone far away, is that you won’t be checking your email and social media until 2 a.m. (and first thing in the morning!). You should make checking your laptop or phone the last part of your morning routine, allowing you the time you need to complete more important and necessary tasks.
Start Your Day Off Healthy
Try making a smoothie, eating a breakfast bar, muffins, yogurt, cereal and milk, munch on veggies, fresh fruit, trail mix or even a fast peanut butter and jelly sandwich. You should also be drinking lots of water (adding lemon can give you a real boost), taking multivitamins, and getting in a short workout or meditation routine if you can.
Study
This isn’t for everyone, but you should give this a try to see if it’s possible because there are so many benefits. Studying in the morning mean less people at the library and less stress. Getting your work done early will free up the rest of your day giving you more time to relax and enjoy your evening. If you’re short on time, just review your notes of the classes you are going to have that day.
Evening Routine
You need to have enough sleep to wake up at the time you want. The obvious solution to combat sleepiness is to get more rest at night. Usually, 6-8 hours of sleep is the recommended amount of slumber you need, but everyone is slightly different on this.