I tracked my morning habits for 60 days and found out what actually moved the needle, what was fake productivity, and what changed my mood.
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Get it on Play StoreI didn’t start because I had some heroic self-improvement phase. I started because my mornings were messy and I kept lying to myself about it.
I’d say I “had a routine,” but really I was just winging it. Some days I’d wake up and crush it. Other days I’d scroll for 25 minutes, make coffee, forget breakfast, and wonder why I felt behind by 9:15 a.m.
So I tracked my morning habits for 60 days. Not in a fancy, guru way—just plain old checkboxes. And honestly? It exposed me fast.
I kept it simple. Too many habits would’ve made me quit by day four.
I tracked these five:
That’s it. Nothing dramatic. Nothing that required a new personality.
And I used Trider (myhabits.in) to log them daily, because if I’m being honest, I needed something easy enough that I’d actually stick with it.
The biggest surprise? My mornings weren’t the problem. My first 20 minutes were.
If I started with my phone, the whole morning got slippery. One notification turned into five minutes. Five minutes turned into a random rabbit hole. Then I’d feel rushed, and that rushed feeling followed me all day.
When I didn’t touch my phone first, I was calmer, sharper, and way less annoyed by normal stuff. That tiny change had a ridiculous effect.
Also, the days I drank water before coffee felt better almost immediately. Not magically transformed—just less groggy, less cranky, less “why do I feel like a dehydrated potato?”
I’m a sucker for data, so here’s what the 60 days looked like.
And here’s the part that mattered more than the streaks: the combinations.
The best mornings weren’t the ones where I did everything perfectly. They were the mornings where I did these three things:
When I hit those three, the day felt smoother almost every time. Less mental clutter. Less decision fatigue. More actual action.
I used to think the best morning routine was about discipline. Like if I wasn’t doing a long list of impressive habits, I was failing.
Nope. That’s nonsense.
Here’s what actually mattered:
And here’s what didn’t matter as much as I thought:
I had a few days where I woke up at 6:15 a.m., meditated, stretched, and made eggs like some wellness person in a sponsored reel. And guess what? Some of those days still felt off because I checked my phone too early or didn’t plan my work.
So yeah, the routine isn’t the point. The sequence is.
If I had to pick one habit that gave me the most return, it was writing my top 3 tasks.
Not a giant to-do list. Not “everything I should do someday.” Just three things.
That tiny act removed so much friction. I stopped opening my laptop and thinking, “Okay… now what?” That question wastes more time than people realize.
And when I wrote those three tasks in the morning, I was more likely to finish at least one meaningful thing before lunch.
My rule now is simple:
That mix works better than some giant ambitious list that makes me feel guilty by 10 a.m.
Movement was my weakest habit. Not because I hate moving—I don’t. I just kept underestimating how much effort even 10 minutes can feel like when I’m sleepy and the bed is still emotionally manipulative.
But I noticed something weird: when I did even a short walk, a few stretches, or a quick bodyweight circuit, I was less likely to drift into lazy mode.
So I stopped pretending I needed a full workout every morning. That’s too much pressure.
Now I aim for 10 minutes only. If I do more, cool. If not, fine. That lower bar made me way more consistent.
This was the biggest thing I learned.
Tracking made the invisible visible.
I could feel that some mornings were better than others, but I couldn’t tell why until I tracked them. And once I had 60 days of data, patterns started shouting at me.
I learned that:
That last one is annoying, but true. If I slept badly, my morning habits got weaker across the board. No habit system can fully rescue a terrible night of sleep. I wish it could. It can’t.
If you want to try this yourself, don’t make it a giant project. That’s how people quit.
Start with 3 to 5 habits max. Keep them obvious. Keep them measurable.
Here’s a simple setup:
And don’t track with guilt. Track like a scientist, not a judge.
That matters a lot. Because if you treat missed days like moral failure, you’ll stop tracking. And then you’re back to guessing.
I’d make one change right away: I’d track mood alongside habits.
Because sometimes the morning itself looked “good” on paper, but I still felt scattered. Other times I missed one habit and still had a great day.
So if you track this yourself, add a quick 1-to-5 mood score. Or even just:
That little note adds context. And context is everything.
I’d also start smaller. Instead of five habits, I’d begin with three and build up later. The less friction, the better.
Here’s my honest summary:
And the biggest lesson of all? You don’t need a perfect morning. You need a repeatable one.
That’s the part that actually changed my days—not some aesthetic routine, not motivation, not a grand transformation. Just small habits, tracked honestly, for long enough to see what was real.
So if your mornings feel messy, don’t just guess. Track them for a month and see what happens. Try it with Trider, myhabits.in, and keep it stupidly simple—you might be surprised by what your own habits are already telling you.