The 10-minute slow start
Open one tab, write the three outcomes that matter today, then open the rest. Frames the morning around intent, not the inbox.
These are the prompts we hear about most from readers — light enough to skip on a tough day, useful enough that you'll come back to them next week.
See the toolkitOpen one tab, write the three outcomes that matter today, then open the rest. Frames the morning around intent, not the inbox.
Group apps into "needs me now", "later today" and "weekly". The default is muted unless a real human needs a response.
Add a five-minute buffer either side of every meeting block to breathe, hydrate and look away from the screen.
Every 20 minutes, glance at something around 20 feet away for 20 seconds. A kind little reset for tired eyes.
Take one short meeting standing or walking. Energy returns, posture shifts, and ideas usually flow more easily.
Keep one meal away from the laptop. Even fifteen unhurried minutes makes the afternoon noticeably steadier.
Write one line in your notes app naming where you stopped and what you'll start tomorrow.
Close stale tabs, archive finished threads, leave the desk looking like a place you'd like to return to.
Move locations for ten minutes — a walk, a window, a kettle — so the workday has a real edge.
Quickly mark which of today's habits felt good. That tiny review is what makes them stick.
The daily habits card and the wind-down checklist are both in our toolkit, ready to pin near your desk.