Seven daily disciplines.The Protocol.
01
Stick to a routine — same time to bed, same time up. If you work at seven, this is easy. If you live by night, build the schedule that fits your life and hold it. Account for how long you take to fall asleep. Phone down before bed. Journal or read instead. The hour matters less than the discipline of holding it.
02
No phone. No social media. Prepare the day, stretch, eat well. Coffee waits ninety minutes after you wake. Ten minutes of meditation or a walk if time allows. Build the routine that activates your body and clears your head. The components are yours; the discipline is non-negotiable.
03
Pick what fits — gym, run, yoga, cycling. Skiing, gymnastics, soccer. The category matters less than the hour. After a rough week, an active recovery day counts: jog, stretch, walk. Show up. Move the body.
04
Motivational, psychological, business, educational — pick the lane that serves you. Switch books across the run if you finish one. Decide before the challenge what you’ll read; deciding mid-grind is how it slips. Ten pages a day is a book a month.
05
Pick the work that compounds — a skill, a project, the thing you’d want ten years from now. Limit distractions; concentrate fully. If you don’t have a focus in mind yet, start with a skill outside your job — something with personal meaning. The first hour you protect for yourself becomes the thing that defines you.
06
No strict diet — learn what works for your body and stick to it. Skip alcohol, skip sugar, don’t eat late. Better sleep, better digestion. When you cook lunch, make two portions; that’s dinner. Limit soft-drinks and cheat meals. Eat with intent.
07
Document the day before you sleep. What worked. What didn’t. The skill you practiced. The workout you did. What you can improve tomorrow. Without reflection, the days blur. Reflection turns a year into a record instead of a fog.