You NEED To Wake Up EARLY

40 replies
If you want to get what others people do not have ...

... then you need to do what other people are not willing to do.

And one of those things is to WAKE UP EARLY.

This is my 14th day waking up at 05:50 AM every single morning.

Now don't get me wrong. A lot of people do this.

Most people with jobs start at 07:00 or 08:00 so waking up early for them is a must.

But most entrepreneurs ... or infopreneurs ... or however you want to call them, DO NOT.

And this simple decision, to wake up before anyone else is changing my life in a VERY POSITIVE MANNER.

Why?

Three reasons.

1) More energy.

2) More time for what it is important for me.

3) More focus.

Let me develop.

Time is not made equal. Yes, you have 24 hours in a day. Unless you want to live in Mars, you will have the same amount of time as everyone else.

But this doesn't mean that all of those 24 hours are equal in quality.

Why?

Because a quality hour is made out of more than 60 minutes. It is TIME + ENERGY + FOCUS.

One hour in the morning, let's say between 08:00 - 09:00 is more PRODUCTIVE for me than three hours between 17:00 - 20:00.

I don't multitask. I'm more creative. I get shit done. It is as simple as this.

When I wake up at 11:00 AM, the day is lost. I'll spend the first two hours getting ready and I'll feel tired for the rest of the day.

But when I wake up in the morning, I can get to work as soon as 08:00. Yes, I do spend some time in bed, listening to motivational materials. Yes, I spend around 30 minutes drinking coffee in the morning.

But by the time other people are just waking up and showering, I'm working on my most important tasks.

And that is ... PRICELESS.

So why is this relevant to you?

You need to wake up EARLY. You need to get an start on everyone else.

You need to start your day by making yourself STRONG.

My morning routine is simple actually.

My alarm clocks rings at 05:50. I have a second alarm at 06:00.

As soon as it rings, I fire up YouTube to watch a few motivational materials.

At about 06:10, I get out of bed and drink my coffee. Then I get dressed and go outside.

Outside I walk 5000 steps. This is tracked by a FitBit Charge HR.

This means that I'll spend around 40 minutes and this is the thing that wakes me up.

I then have breakfast, shower (most of the time, sometimes I shower later in the day) and GET TO WORK.

By 12:00, I have already invested at least two hours of focused time in my most important tasks. This means 2 hours of writing NOT of answering emails or doing low leverage tasks.

And I usually get everything done for that day by 14:00.

What I do for the rest of the day? Enjoy life.

How can I get up so early though? I get to sleep early. By 22:00 I'm in bed. I aim to get eight hours of sleep so I won't feel sleep deprived afterwards.

So what about you? At what hours are you waking up? How effective is your strategy?

Best regards,
Razvan

#early #wake
  • Profile picture of the author KeyboardHustler
    I often try go to sleep at 01 and wake up 07:20 .. Maybe I should try get that 8 hour sleep
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  • Profile picture of the author ChapLeo
    We all know that the Earth revolves around its axis. This revolving action gives rise to the concept of time, as normal humans know it. Since time itself is circular, I don't believe "rising early" will have a much of an impact as you make it out to be. For example, I'm a late-riser; I usually wake up around 11:00 a.m. I don't feel tired at all. However, according to the RogozRazvan's post, I'm inefficient.

    I don't think so.The reason is; I sleep at 4:00 a.m in the morning. This is what @RogozRazvan is missing in his post. It's not exactly the time you rise, but rather "how much you sleep". Humans need 8 hours of sleep, give or take a couple of hours. If you can wake up early in the morning, great! But if you're a night owl, also great!

    Been a night owl has genetics involved in it. If you have genes to be a night owl, that's what you should do AND NOT listen to sermons by early birds. Here is the relevant article:
    Why You're an Early Bird or a Night Owl

    Some of World's most successful people are night owls. This includes: Barack Obama, Joseph Stalin, Winston Churchill, J.R.R. Tolkien, Samuel Johnson, Charles Darwin and Elvis Presley.

    In fact, some literacy and health experts encourage people to become night-owls.


    Here are the other relevant sources, for your convenience:

    Intelligent people stay up later

    In praise of night owls

    If you want to get ahead, be a night owl


    Hope that will destroy the centuries old myth of waking early.
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    • Profile picture of the author ishboo
      Originally Posted by ChapLeo View Post

      Been a night owl has genetics involved in it. If you have genes to be a night owl, that's what you should do AND NOT listen to sermons by early birds. Here is the relevant article:
      Why You're an Early Bird or a Night Owl
      Your WebMD link says this verbatim:

      "night owls tend to be more depressed, have a higher dependence on caffeine, and use alcohol more," Sharkey says. But the news isn't all bad. A recent study in Belgium found that night owls are able to stay more focused as the day goes on, compared with early risers.

      Morning people, however, also have advantages. "Larks generally sleep better, have more regular sleep patterns, and have more flexible personalities," Sharkey says. They also tend to be happier and feel healthier than night owls, according to a recent study from the University of Toronto."

      I'd rather not be depressed, or depend on caffeine, and just because you are more focused throughout the day does not mean you are productive with it.

      Because of that, I am hitting the sack right now. I will see how this works for tomorrow
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  • Profile picture of the author Alex Frei
    This is interesting. I consider 5:50 late.

    ChapLeo, did you understand the reasoning for the "Why night owls are more intelligent", your first link? If you did, could you rephrase it, please?
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    • Profile picture of the author ChapLeo
      Originally Posted by Alex Frei View Post

      This is interesting. I consider 5:50 late.

      ChapLeo, did you understand the reasoning for the "Why night owls are more intelligent", your first link? If you did, could you rephrase it, please?

      I would be happy to explain. It’s a little complex, so let’s start with a similar, but unrelated example, to better understand the article.

      One of the clever ways to find-out whether a person was born before 1972 (in the US) is to ask that person whether he/she received the smallpox vaccine. Since the smallpox vaccine was stopped in 1972, if a person has received it, the person was definitely born before 1972. Why would you even ask this question? Obviously if that person is refusing to tell you his/her age.

      Now let’s look at the article (bearing the above example in mind). The sleep-wake cycle in humans is controlled by a part of the brain called the hypothalamus. The cycle, known scientifically as the circadian rhythm, pre-disposes a person to become an early bird or a night owl.

      The Savannah Principle states that human brains are quite capable of dealing with situations and entities that existed in our ancestral homes (caves and the Savannah), while having difficulty dealing with situations and entities that didn’t exist in our ancestral homes. For example, ALL humans can walk/run on two legs (which is quite a feat although we do it without conscious thought), talk, climb trees, find a healthy mate (beauty/handsomeness are just romantic words for health) etc…

      But would all humans understand the Special Theory of Light (STL), even if a physicist is to explain it to them? No. Only a handful of humans will be able to comprehend the equations. Why? Because understanding the STL was not required for our survival in the caves. The humans who do understand the STL are considered to be intelligent, because “they can understand something that other humans can’t understand”. Intelligence is a relative factor. An IQ test measures a person’s intelligence relative to that of the general population. So even though been able to talk and understand speech is an IMMENSE neurological achievement, it’s not considered intelligence because most humans can do it. So we can theorize that General Intelligence evolved to solve evolutionary novel problems (like understanding calculus). Humans who have higher degrees of general intelligence have (for lack of better words) “novel brains”.

      Now here’s where night owls come-in. In the Savannah, all humans went to sleep early and got-up early. Why? Simply because they didn’t have lights. Fire? Fire was discovered recently; I’m talking way before that discovery. Any human whose brain made him/her stay up at night is likely to get eaten by predators like lions, leopards and snakes (who unlike humans, could see very well at night). Therefore, the number of night-owls in pre-history is negligible.

      Fast-forward to modern ages where we have discovered fire and electricity. Today, the night owl population has exploded. Why? Because staying-up at night doesn’t mean ending up as a lion’s breakfast. Since we know the number of night-owls in pre-history was near zero, we can theorize that modern night owls are the product of ‘novel’ mutations. The keyword is ‘novel’.

      Dr. Satoshi Kanazawa theorizes that the Savannah Principle people holds stronger in less intelligent humans than the more intelligent ones. In other words, the less intelligent humans have all the instincts necessary to survive in the wild while the more intelligent ones may prefer activities that allow them to achieve more in the modern World, but would get them eaten in the wild. In fact, I remember Bill gates saying that he would have ended-up a lion’s dinner if he was in the wild.

      Since the early-to-bed, early-to-rise is a primitive feature of intelligence (Savannah Principle), Dr. Satoshi hypothesizes that people who possess it have lower levels of intelligence (as perceived by modern Intelligence tests). However, they will be better at surviving in the wild than the ‘intelligent ones’.

      According to Dr. Satoshi ‘s research, the night owl phenomenon serves as a visible cue, allowing us to distinguish between humans who have the Savannah Principle strongly (the less intelligent ones) and those who don’t express the Savannah Principle strongly (the more intelligent ones). In other words, he’s saying that since it’s hard to deduce the intelligence of a person by analyzing the DNA of that person, we can instead use the “night-owl, early-bird” phenomena to deduce the intelligence. Much like deducing the age of a person by asking whether he/she got the smallpox vaccine.

      Sorry for the long post.
      Hope that helps.

      P.S. I'm a night owl. I always think it's much more peaceful at night, when there's no buzzing of cars and people and what not. Here's a Lenovo commercial on this phenomenon (I don't recommend Lenovo though ):
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      • Profile picture of the author Alex Frei
        Originally Posted by ChapLeo View Post

        P.S. I'm a night owl. I always think it's much more peaceful at night
        You wouldn't defend an idea that owls are more intelligent if you were a lark.

        Night is more peaceful than what? "night" is a long stretch of time. Isn't 4 AM as peaceful as 2 AM?

        Thanks for the long post, but there are so many things that I find wrong with it that I can't spend time discussing them.

        @AlexFrei - Don't challenge me . What hour do you wake up at?
        Razvan,
        My "earliness chart":
        ~4 early
        4-5 OK
        5~ late
        But that's me. I've been always like this.
        In winter I usually wake up later (AM5-6). In summers I'm up around 4AM. No alarms.
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        • Profile picture of the author ChapLeo
          Originally Posted by Alex Frei View Post

          You wouldn't defend an idea that owls are more intelligent if you were a lark.

          Night is more peaceful than what? "night" is a long stretch of time. Isn't 4 AM as peaceful as 2 AM?

          Thanks for the long post, but there are so many things that I find wrong with it that I can't spend time discussing them.
          I'm not defending the idea that night owls are intelligent. I was merely explaining Dr. Satoshi 's research because you asked me to. My mother has always been an early-bird and she's a District Judge. My father is a night-owl and is a reputed lawyer. So success can be achieved either way.

          My position has always been that you are genetically pre-disposed to become a night-owl or an early bird. And that you shouldn't be promoting one-side because it may not be best for everyone

          Also, 2 AM is as peaceful as 4 AM. But if you're getting up at 4 AM you'll need at least half-an-hour to energize yourself, by which time the daily clatter would have started.

          By the way, Happy Valentine's Day Everyone!
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  • Profile picture of the author Joe Diallo
    The Early Bird vs The Night Owl ...interesting debate. Are we predisposed to either one? If so, can we change to become the opposite.

    As of my birthday (January 13th) I have made the conscious decision to start waking up at 6am. It has been almost a month and I'm still sticking with it

    My typical schedule is...

    6:00-6:30 Read empowering passages
    6:30-8:00 Workout/Shower
    8:00-9:00 Pray/Meditate
    9:00-15:00 Work
    15:00-19:00 Work on my passion (Music production)
    19:00-20:00 Write thoughts in journal
    20:00-22:00 Read a book
    22:00 Sleep
    ........

    I have seen significant progress. Similar to Rogoz I have a surge of energy, I feel like the clutter of "stuff" in my head has been removed. I have clarity. Overall, I am getting things done I am being productive.

    Leo brings up good point though we all have the same 24hrs.

    So i guess it would be a question of how one decides to spend that time.
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    • Profile picture of the author C G
      Originally Posted by Joe Diallo View Post

      The Early Bird vs The Night Owl ...interesting debate. Are we predisposed to either one? If so, can we change to become the opposite.

      As of my birthday (January 13th) I have made the conscious decision to start waking up at 6am. It has been almost a month and I'm still sticking with it

      My typical schedule is...

      6:00-6:30 Read empowering passages
      6:30-8:00 Workout/Shower
      8:00-9:00 Pray/Meditate
      9:00-15:00 Work
      15:00-19:00 Work on my passion (Music production)
      19:00-20:00 Write thoughts in journal
      20:00-22:00 Read a book
      22:00 Sleep
      ........

      I have seen significant progress. Similar to Rogoz I have a surge of energy, I feel like the clutter of "stuff" in my head has been removed. I have clarity. Overall, I am getting things done I am being productive.

      Leo brings up good point though we all have the same 24hrs.

      So i guess it would be a question of how one decides to spend that time.
      So you don't socialize? Or eat? Or surf the web? o.0
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      • Profile picture of the author Joe Diallo
        Originally Posted by C G View Post

        So you don't socialize? Or eat? Or surf the web? o.0
        Of course I eat. I usually do it near the beginning or towards the end of a task. Mind you, that agenda is a "typical" day for me. Not everyday is identical, but the majority of my days do consist of those tasks.


        As far as socializing that is one aspect I can definitely use some improvement in.


        Originally Posted by RogozRazvan View Post

        @ChapLeo - You've got way too much time on your hand. OK. You're right. Enjoy thinking that you are smarter than anyone else for having a different preference. I'm not going to encourage a conversation with someone who feels his self-image is attacked due to an well-accepted, proven advice.

        And what you are doing is still confirmation bias, since I could bring evolutionary proof that early to rise is better. But as I've said, I won't feed this conversation.

        @RealCasher - My pleasure.

        @JoeDiallo - My advice is to drop the fixed hours. This has never worked for me. Too much structure can actually hurt. My schedule is generally as follows.

        05:50 - Alarm clock sounds.
        05:50 - 06:15 - In bed, on the phone, fighting the urge to get back to sleep.
        06:00 - 07:00 - Grooming, ironing clothes for the day, drinking coffee.
        07:00 - 08:00 - Walk outside, usually breakfast.
        08:00 - 14:00 - Work in 30 minutes intervals.
        14:00 - 18:00 - Leisure time, reading, socializing, hobbies.
        18:00 - 19:00 - Outside, decompressing before going to sleep.
        19:00 - 21:00 - Getting small tasks done, socializing, preparing for sleep, grooming.

        But I don't have fixed hours because life gets in the way. Sometimes I'm outside by 06:30. Other times I'm outside at 08:00. The thing is that I have rituals instead of appointments on my calendar and it doesn't really matter for me if I do them one hour earlier or later.

        I am glad that you've found this experiment productive. I suggest you invest into a health tracker so you can get better insight into how you sleep and you can use big data and pattern analysis to take better decisions.

        @AlexFrei - Don't challenge me . What hour do you wake up at?
        Interesting. Is the time you go to sleep and wake up flexible or is that a "fixed" thing on your schedule?

        I agree that life is unpredictable and things happen. For me I am a rhythm guy, so if I consistently go to sleep/workout/read etc. the same time every day then that increases the chance of me sticking with those habits.

        With the flexibility in your schedule, it looks like your able to complete a lot more activities. I would not mind adding that to my arsenal.

        Also, how often do you update you schedule? Do you plan your schedule every night for the next day? Weekly? Monthly?
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        • Profile picture of the author heavysm
          I definitely don't need to wake up early. Need is a very strong word, and speaking for myself only, it doesn't apply to being an early riser.

          If there is a need to get stuff done, i just get it done, whether I get up at 5 am or 11am. Lately I've been getting up rather late, upwards of 11 am - 1 pm, simply because I am sleeping around 5 - 6 am.

          This is typically done so i can talk to international clients and brain storm new ideas for different projects over skype with them.

          To be fair, i did the early wake up for many years, and i did so pretty sufficiently just because i had school, work, or other obligations that were non-business.

          But I can't personally say that i need to wake up early because I can if i want to, but the need to doesn't exist since my productivity doesn't rely on being an early riser.
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  • Profile picture of the author RealCasher
    Dude thanks for that.. I need to make this thread my homepage.
    Not to mention that sleep quality of night is better 100x of sleeping at day light
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  • Profile picture of the author RogozRazvan
    @ChapLeo - You’ve got way too much time on your hand. OK. You’re right. Enjoy thinking that you are smarter than anyone else for having a different preference. I’m not going to encourage a conversation with someone who feels his self-image is attacked due to an well-accepted, proven advice.

    And what you are doing is still confirmation bias, since I could bring evolutionary proof that early to rise is better. But as I’ve said, I won’t feed this conversation.

    @RealCasher - My pleasure.

    @JoeDiallo - My advice is to drop the fixed hours. This has never worked for me. Too much structure can actually hurt. My schedule is generally as follows.

    05:50 - Alarm clock sounds.
    05:50 - 06:15 - In bed, on the phone, fighting the urge to get back to sleep.
    06:00 - 07:00 - Grooming, ironing clothes for the day, drinking coffee.
    07:00 - 08:00 - Walk outside, usually breakfast.
    08:00 - 14:00 - Work in 30 minutes intervals.
    14:00 - 18:00 - Leisure time, reading, socializing, hobbies.
    18:00 - 19:00 - Outside, decompressing before going to sleep.
    19:00 - 21:00 - Getting small tasks done, socializing, preparing for sleep, grooming.

    But I don’t have fixed hours because life gets in the way. Sometimes I’m outside by 06:30. Other times I’m outside at 08:00. The thing is that I have rituals instead of appointments on my calendar and it doesn’t really matter for me if I do them one hour earlier or later.

    I am glad that you’ve found this experiment productive. I suggest you invest into a health tracker so you can get better insight into how you sleep and you can use big data and pattern analysis to take better decisions.

    @AlexFrei - Don’t challenge me . What hour do you wake up at?
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  • Profile picture of the author MrErickson
    I always try to wake up early. Earlier than 8am that is. I've always felt as if my day is longer when i wake up earlier. If I wake up later than 8 it feels as if the hours go on faster and I become less productive.
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  • Profile picture of the author TheWriteOne
    I also tend to work during late hours and be able to sleep during the day. But I still prefer sleeping in early so I could wake up early. I feel more energized/well rested when I get to sleep at 9 and wake up by 5.

    Debate of night owls and early birds.
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    • Profile picture of the author OmarNegron
      Originally Posted by TheWriteOne View Post

      I also tend to work during late hours and be able to sleep during the day. But I still prefer sleeping in early so I could wake up early. I feel more energized/well rested when I get to sleep at 9 and wake up by 5.

      Debate of night owls and early birds.

      hahaha nice one!

      Yeah I agree it's important to get up early because in my opinion you can get so much more done while everyone is sleeping. It depends on your living situation also. Sometimes, the morning is the ONLY time to really have peace and silence without any type of distractions.

      But I think you also have to remember, "it's not about how many hours you sleep, but what you do when you aren't sleeping." I heard that in a video once..

      So it's not only important to wake up early but to make those extra hours count...
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  • Profile picture of the author art72
    No you need to wake up early...being it suits you. As does some weird so-called proof you present.

    I'll keep it short and simple... Freewill my friend!

    Without it... you, time, money, systems, programmed thinking, etc... Is just another idealistic attempt to justify your actions against the whole of humanity...a losing proposition and a waste of time.

    Much like trying to convince a heterosexual that reducing procreation would extend the life expectancy of the planet by not creating more consumers, and thus not depleting our resources as fast. No pun intented towards the gay population...merely an argument that may have some truth, but only to those who by choice happen to agree... Again, freewill.

    Waking up is a benefit you employ... (Until the day you don't wake up anyway!)
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  • Profile picture of the author sttbs
    In my opinion, I think that as people are all different, so are their optimal sleeping habits. Some works great as night owls, some works great as early risers. What's important is that productive working environment and that conducive and dark sleeping environment. What time you wake up and do your daily routine doesn't really matter if you can focus on your work efficiently in that limited time.
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  • Profile picture of the author David Ogden
    Throughout my life I have been a daylight person arising with the sun and retiring at dusk. I have lived in different parts of the world including Scotland where days are long in the summer and short in the winter and near the equator where days and nights are equel.

    I know I perform best in daylight and I have a natural alarm clock in the form of the dawn chorus.
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  • Profile picture of the author cyqnusnite
    Why get up that early if you are getting most of the rest of your day to "enjoy life"?
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  • Profile picture of the author King Manu
    I forced myself in the last months to wake up at 6 Am. I got this workout routine + listening to Tony Robbins Hour of Power at the same time, it gives me a huge amount of energy and i feel i can achieve anything that day.

    Back in the days when i used to wake up like 11 am , it took me like 2 hours to not be dizzy anymore. Now like in half hour i am fresh , energized, and with the focus of a hawk.

    Not to mention the awesome night sleep i get now. I wake up so rested. Because when you sleep during the day with all that lighting and noise and stuff, you can't rest properly. You can't compare 1 hour of midnight sleep with 3 hours of daytime sleep.

    so, Early birds for me and i am not going to switch it back ever !
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  • Profile picture of the author ProServices
    This is a great post Razvan! I needed to read this as I wake up at 8:30 every day and at 11 am on weekends. I'm taking the 4 hour working week to seriously....lol

    But I totally agree that waking up early and going to bed early has so many benefits. I liked your 5000 steps every day. I have an app that counts the steps on my phone. Thanks again for the great motivation.
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  • Profile picture of the author RogozRazvan
    @MrErickson - Yes, same thing here.

    @Joe Diallo - Yes, that’s the only fixed aspect from my schedule. The day usually follows the same path (wake up, grooming, coffee, go outside, eat breakfast, work for a few hours, study, etc) but the only alarms at at 05:50 and at 21:15.

    I only plan the tasks I need to do for tomorrow from the day before. Some tasks are on repeat so I don’t need to plan them. Every day I decide on my three MITs (most important tasks) and on the other things I need to do. I try to balance structure with flexibility.

    I don’t have a fixed time to do X but I have priorities. First the three MITs then the other works tasks then the personal task. I use all my “premium fuel” on the work tasks and once I feel that I’m not at my peak anymore, I start to decompress for the rest of the day.

    @Heavyism - Whatever works for you. I like mornings.

    @Alex Frei - OK, I may try that too. I want to get into the position to wake up without an alarm first at 05:50 and then I may reduce my sleep to seven hours.

    @Art72 - What does free will has to do with a productivity system Art72? In life you do things you don’t like to do to get things you couldn’t get otherwise. Yes, nobody forces you to go to the gym but in the same time, if you want a nice body, you HAVE to go to the gym (and eat right). Nobody forces you to work hard but if you want money, you HAVE to work hard and smart.

    I know the concept of volitional consciousness but the cost is always constant. If you want to have just a shelter above your head, you need to do X. If you want to have a $50.000.000 penthouse, you need to do X + Y + Z + many more. If you want to get the gold medal at the olympics you need to train every single day.

    So I don’t see how your argument is useful. Yes, it is true, you don’t have to do anything. Not even shower or eat. Not even get out of bed in the morning or have a job. But if you want better results in life, YOU HAVE to do a lot of things.

    @sttbs - Yes and no. The work environment is shaped for early risers. Not everyone in this world is self-employed and some actually go from 9 - 5 (I’m not one of them), no matter if they are washing dishes or are C-level execs.

    @David - That’s beautiful, I would love to live in Scotland and wake up there

    @Cyqnusnite - If you haven’t understood this from my post, then my explanation will be worthless. However, here it goes. The first hours of the day are the best for me because I’m focused, creative and full of energy. It is like driving at 200mph with absolute control of the wheel. After a while, that energy is depleted and I can do tasks that do not require so much willpower or focus.

    @King Manu - I’ve never truly adopted Robbin’s routine, even if I’ve tried it several times. Tens of times actually. Power breathing is interesting but the rest is a bit too repetitive for me.

    @Ishboo - Yes, true, I know a lot of people who are working in night shifts. It affects their mood, long term.

    @Pro Services - It is 10k a day, not 5k. Thank you!
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  • We are all different, there is no ideal solution for everyone.
    I tried once living oaccording to schedule, waking up early, doing some workout etc. but for me it's counterproductive. I cannot concentrate in the morning. Yes, I have a lot of energy, but I can't even meditate normally. It also depends on the current task, but in most cases I cannot concentrate at all and start surfing internet ad doing a lot of other useless things.
    But later in the evening I still have energy to do the job, but it has somewhat different nature. I feel more calm and that's why I can do more. Especially after midnight, when everyone is sleeping.
    It's definetely worth to try waking up so early, but such schedule will not fit everyone.
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  • Profile picture of the author Authentic
    I agree that waking early causes higher productivity. As a woman, I definitely wake early because I have a home and family to take care of, as well as a drive to be productive with my online endeavors. The morning hours are great for better focus, for me. I am not a night owl.
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    • Profile picture of the author Sangfroid
      I have done both.

      I had an afternoon shift job many years ago.
      Got home around 2am and to bed around
      3:30, up at 10am. It was OK but I prefer
      early rising.

      I like to get up by 3am or earlier because
      I enjoy meditating for 2 hours of so when
      it is quiet. I also read for 45min or so.

      All of this before I start work. I feel like
      my day is already successful if I start out
      doing this daily routine.

      I only need 4-5 hours of sleep.
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  • Profile picture of the author Odahh
    this year when i get to where i want to get.. i will get a few chickens to lay eggs .. and you need to wake up early to keep the chickens happy ..

    i like waking up early for the last 4 month i have been waking up at 5 a.m because of work ..

    in any case it really depends on what you do
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  • Profile picture of the author sunray
    Did you know, very many famous writers -- from Blazac to Rowling -- mostly or only wrote at night? And I think there is a very good reason to this: it's the time of peace and quiet.
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  • Profile picture of the author creztor
    You don't need to wake up early. There's no right or wrong way to be successful. What you do need is to be focused and motivated. That's the problem with some people is they don't know where they are going or what they are aiming for. Do it early, late at night, in the middle of the day? Doesn't matter.
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  • Profile picture of the author Kurt
    If the early bird gets the worm, I think I'll just sleep in and have bacon and eggs instead.
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  • Profile picture of the author harvestmeaduk
    As what some people have mentioned here, each one's different. I know someone who still get things done even if he wakes up at 8. He's even more productive than someone I know who wakes up at 6.
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  • Profile picture of the author JimsonWright
    I would like to be able to wake up early but I'm a bit nocturnal. I've been more productive with things that I do at night time. I think faster at night as well.
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    • Profile picture of the author Daniel Evans
      Getting the correct amount of sleep and making the most of my time is more important to me.

      I tend to wake when it's light and the time of that happening will vary from season to season. I also like working in the peace of the night.

      The Internet by its term is international and that might involve people having to cope with timezone differences whilst they are collaborating with others from different countries.

      "The early bird catches the worm" assumes that the birds are neighbours.
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  • Profile picture of the author dwall
    I have been considering starting to wake up early, but first I have to wait till I have a single apartment.
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  • Profile picture of the author DoReMiFa
    I like your attitude Razvan! That is also great for health! It's better to go to sleep at 22 than at 03. But I'm night bird. In the morning I don't like to do anything. I hate mornings and I try to avoid them My brain works the best in the afternoon and at night.
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  • Profile picture of the author NootropicBrain
    I'm sticking with the basic 8 hours of sleep thing. It doesn't matter if you stay up late, or wake up early, if you get the right amount of sleep, and maintain good sleep hygiene.
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  • Very interesting, I might try this...
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  • Profile picture of the author Trey Morgan
    I agree their are benefits to waking up early in the morning. However, as an entrepreneur you get to decide whether you want to wake-up early or not. I think the most important thing is to figure out what works for you. Some people work better at night, some people work better in the day and some people work better in the morning.

    So, it's really up to the individual to create a schedule that will lead to higher production.
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