Here's what nobody tells you about having a bad morning routine.
It's not just about mornings. It's about everything after. Your energy. Your actions. Your attitude.
How your day goes depends so much on how it starts.
And when you start strong, people notice.
After a few months of waking up early and being on time, something weird happened.
Jake confessed he'd been lying about dinner times for years. Telling me it's 30 minutes earlier. Just so I'd show up "on time."
My boss pulled me aside: "Melissa’s been concerned about your punctuality earlier in the year… Was everything OK?"
Sarah said: "Honestly? You being so late all the time felt like you didn't care about my time."
That one hurt.
For years, I'd been losing things without knowing it. People's trust. Respect. Chances. My reputation.
All because I couldn't get out of bed. But now?
Melissa started inviting me to morning planning. Jake stopped lying. My boss said I "really stepped up." My friendship with Sarah has never been better.
For the first time in years, I felt in control.
I got my energy, respect AND my life back.
All from standing on a alarm clock called Ruggie for 10 seconds every morning.