Three Practices for the Overwhelmed, Stressed, Anxious

By Leo Babauta

Many of us feel overwhelmed by all we need to do, and it can be downright stressful.

I’d like to share three practices to take you from overwhelmed to just whelmed.

You can’t eliminate stress, anxiety or the feeling of being overwhelmed from your life, nor would you want to. However, you can see them as wonderful places to practice some amazing things that will help in all areas of your life.

When you’re feeling overwhelmed, stressed or anxious … you can do one or more of these three practices:

  1. The Practice of Training in Uncertainty. When you’re feeling stressed or overwhelmed, it comes from a feeling of uncertainty. We don’t know how things are going to go, we worry that we can’t do it all, we don’t know how we’re going to do with any of it, we’re uncertain that we’re good enough to handle all of this. Uncertainty. Our minds don’t like that feeling, and we want stable ground under our feet, something solid, certain, or reassuring. Unfortunately life never gives us that reassuring certainty. So we’re always running, always trying to cope with the uncertainty by doing as much as we can, making lists, finding the perfect software or system, running to distractions. Instead, we can train our minds to stay with the uncertainty, and gradually become more comfortable in this state. And then we can be at peace in the middle of chaos. Read more about this practice.
  2. The Practice of Letting Go. When we’re stressed out, it’s because we’re attached to something — attached to doing everything, attached to how people see us, attached to meeting a goal or deadline or reaching some outcome, attached to our self-image. What if we could let go of these attachments, and just be in the moment? Things would suddenly become easier. Luckily letting go is something that’s within our power. Read more about this practice.
  3. The Practice of Doing Just One Activity. Our minds are stressed and overwhelmed because we’re thinking about our uncertain future … but what if we learned to trust the present moment? What if, instead, we just fully immersed ourselves in the activity before us? This is actually a letting go practice, and it’s also a being-fully-present practice. Just fully be in the activity you’re doing, just one activity. Just read this post. Just answer this single email. Just wash this one dish. As if it were the only activity and the most important activity in the world. Because it is. Read more about this practice.

These are all transformative practices, and you can practice them one at a time or one after the other (in the order above, most likely).

Each only takes a moment, but they can transform your world. Try them, with love in your heart, and see a deep trust in yourself start to grow.

Join Me for a Mindfulness Retreat

Would you like to train with me in these practices? I’d love for you to join me in my Zen Habits Mindfulness Retreat, from April 21-23, 2017 in San Francisco. It’s going to be amazing, and I’m really excited about it.

Read more here, and join me!

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Motivation vs Self-Discipline – Which Is the Key to Habit Formation?

Note: This post is written by Kevin Hilton

“We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act but a habit,” said Aristotle.

And in the realm of habit formation, motivation and self-discipline are the most recognizable players.

Some tout self-discipline as the elixir for improvement, while others rally behind motivation as the way to make progress and enjoy the process. And you’ll also find people that pit the two against each other. But do we have to pick between them?

To get to an answer, let’s take a closer look at motivation, discipline, and the roles they play in habit formation.

A Closer Look at Motivation and Why People Crave It

Let us first look at the definition of motivation:

“A person’s desire or willingness to do something.”

Feeling motivated about a project or personal goal can only do you good. Motivation is the fuel that propels one to go to the gym and exercise for the first time. It’s what drives a late waker to get up at 5 AM. It’s what rouses the procrastinating writer to pen over 2,000 words in one sitting.

Brian Tracy once said:

“The hardest part of any important task is getting started on it in the first place.”

But when you’re oozing with excitement and enthusiasm, getting the ball rolling becomes a breeze. Even better, you may even exceed expectations during the first week or two into a project.

Many people crave motivation. And why not!? Few things in life are as satisfying as feeling pumped to make progress and actually making progress.

However, relying on motivation alone to carry you through can backfire. Why? Because it is based on emotion. And we know how fickle and unpredictable emotions can get.

Your reasons for exercising, reading, or writing may stay constant. But your desire or willingness to carry out the tasks you’ve set will waver one way or another. Let’s check out a few scenarios where a motivation-based approach to self-improvement can boomerang.

The First Scenario

Jerry got up early in the morning, just feeling pumped to hit the gym. This isn’t his first attempt to develop an exercise routine. But he’s feeling super motivated today, and perhaps this rush of enthusiasm can make the difference, yes?

Day 1 went well. His goal was to workout for 30 minutes. But he went the extra mile – doing squats, crunches, and push-ups for a little over an hour.

Days 2 to 11 were identical to the first day. Jerry was overflowing with motivation, and he surpassed his goals every time. He’s already feeling stronger and fitter!

But the 12th day came with an unpleasant surprise.

He received an email from his boss rejecting his leave request, and this means a beach getaway with his clique is out of the question. Just when he was getting ready to show his fit bod, Jerry realizes he would be spending hours in his workstation while his buddies are partying by the shore.

Upset and disappointed, Jerry skipped the gym.

Day 13 came, and Jerry was feeling guilty about missing the previous day’s workout. He knows he needs to go to the gym. He knows the perks of staying fit. But his emotional state is in shambles, and he can’t talk himself into getting motivated.

The cycle of missing the gym and feeling so bad about it that he misses yet another session continues. And Jerry isn’t getting closer to achieving his fitness goals.

The Second Scenario

Danielle is a freelance writer, one who loves to procrastinate about writing if I may add.

Whenever the time to write comes, she gets busy with emails, social media, cleaning tasks, and the list goes on. Yes, she gets her writing projects done in the nick of time. But only after spending sleepless nights a week before the deadline.

This time, however, she attempts to turn her career around. Danielle commits to spending the first 2 hours after breakfast on writing for her clients.

Day 1 was full of inspiration. Danielle’s hands can hardly keep up with the ideas pouring from her brain. And before she knew it, she’s created a complete outline, researched related references and studies, and wrote 2,875 words for her client’s ebook. A massive success!

Day 2, however, was a stark contrast to the previous one. She can’t seem to find the muse to inspire her to start writing. She wrestled with ideas. She thought long and hard. But Danielle just can’t get started.

Danielle’s level of motivation seesawed for weeks and so does her productivity levels. After a month, she stuck to her after-breakfast writing routine in only 11 out of 20 days.

She’s not developing the consistency she wants. She’s not writing often enough to finish projects faster so she can take on more clients. And worse, Danielle’s routine may fall by the wayside if something emotionally unsettling comes up.

The Third Scenario

Kevin is a budding blogger in the business space. But between his professional and personal responsibilities, making the time to build a brand and grow a blog is proving difficult.

But his desire to take his blog off the ground is strong, and he committed to an early morning blogging routine.

For the next 21 days, Kevin’s motivation was sky high. Kevin got up at 5 AM, took a bath and breakfast, and worked on the blog from 5:45 AM to 7 AM. He networked on LinkedIn, wrote blog posts, and engaged with people on Twitter.

Kevin started seeing success. His blog’s traffic had a small but noticeable increase. His network is now a little wider. And his Twitter following has grown by the dozens in the past 21 days.

But after 3 weeks of inspired and meaningful work, he stopped as if snatching failure from the jaws of success. The enthusiasm and strong desire to work, which Kevin came to relish, ran out all of a sudden. Without the feel-good emotions, blogging early in the morning doesn’t sound appetizing.

***

You’ve probably experienced the same dip in levels of motivation just when you’re generating momentum. Why does this bizarre turn happen? Shouldn’t accomplishing a day’s task make us feel better and compelled to do more?

The answer takes us back full circle to emotions and their nature.

In his book The Laws Of Emotion, Dutch psychologist and professor Nico Frijda laid down the law of habituation and said:

“Continued pleasures wear off; continued hardships lose their poignancy.”

Excitement, desire, willingness – these positive emotions one feels in anticipation of a task are fleeting, lasting for only 3 to 6 weeks. As the task becomes a habit, people lose the emotional attachment, and they see work for what it is – work.

So Is Motivation Bad?

Far from it!

How can feeling good and making impressive progress on a goal be bad!? However, motivation is a sprinter. It can help us finish short-term projects fast and strong.

But when undertaking long-term endeavors or developing good habits, strong and positive emotions can only get you started. To get through the long haul, you need discipline.

The Unappealing Image and Unbeatable Advantage of Self-Discipline

Self-discipline refers to:

“One’s capacity to control his or her feelings and inclinations in pursuit of what aligns with their values.”

Do you see the night-and-day contrast between motivation and discipline? While the former relies on one’s desire and willingness, the latter uses grit to do what needs to be done regardless of one’s emotional state.

Self-discipline is the number one ingredient for success.

Michael Jordan practiced and trained every single day to be the Michael Jordan.

Chess grandmaster Wesley So became the world no. 2 without a coach, but only after focusing on his training and turning away from the internet.

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart trained intensively from a young age. And by age 10, his skill as a composer rivaled most of his old and established peers.

You can bet that these highly successful people have had their fair share of bad days. On some days, getting out of bed to train must’ve felt like scaling Mt. Everest. And you can be sure they’ve thought of ditching practice for more fun and less demanding pursuits.

But they didn’t, most of the time. Yes, these fine folks sure have fallen prey to temptations and distractions more than once. However, they didn’t let guilt and negative emotions paralyze them and their progress.

But here’s the catch:

Strengthening your resolve and self-discipline is anything but easy.

Developing Self-Discipline Feels Uncomfortable

Head over to Amazon’s book section, and you will find the Motivation Self-Help section stocked with over 89,000 books. As for self-discipline, the topic doesn’t even have its own section, and a search yielded only 8,700+ books.

You can see the same trend in Reddit. The GetDisciplined subreddit only has 206,806 members, while the GetMotivated subreddit boasts more than 10 million subscribers!

And when you go to YouTube, finding videos of rousing speeches is easier than finding videos on how to develop self-control.

What’s up with the lopsided preference for feeding motivation rather than getting disciplined?

The answer:

Because developing self-discipline is uncomfortable.

When you’re motivated, getting started on a project or task is easy. You’re excited. You’re pumped up. And decisive action is the logical follow-up.

When strengthening self-discipline, however, you’re not enthusiastic about a task.

Maybe you feel neutral. But most of the time, you’d rather do something else like watch TV, chat on Facebook, or play video games – anything that’s more fun than the task at hand. And you have to do what you’ve set out to do anyway.

In simpler words, it feels uncomfortable.

You Will Have to Endure Crappy Emotions for a Long Time

What does a writing practice, a thrice-a-week gym routine, and a nightly reading habit have in common? These productive behaviors take an awfully long time to become a habit.

In a 12-week study involving 96 people, researchers found that it takes exactly 66 days before a new behavior becomes a routine.

Ultimately, you want your daily tasks to become daily routines.

Going back to Nico Fridja’s law of emotion, a behavior becomes devoid of any emotional attachment after enough repetition. The euphoric feelings of motivation disappear, and so does pain and exertion necessary in habit formation.

Unfortunately, the positive emotions run out faster than the uncomfortable ones. And the latter can persist for twice as long.

You Will Fail on Some Days…Guaranteed

Look at the following self-talk:

“Aw, crap! I missed yesterday’s workout. I can’t ace my goal 100%. The red dot will look terrible in my progress tracker. I failed big time. Maybe I should just start all over again next week so I get another shot at 100% win?”

See how that escalated quickly?

I’ve had the exact conversation with myself a few weeks ago, and I almost let the guilt destroy my progress. I had to wrestle with the negative self-talk so I can bounce back the next day.

One is bound to fail on some days on his or her quest for self-discipline, and a few mental wrestling matches are inevitable.

You must always look at the bigger picture. The goal isn’t to achieve 100% score on your smartphone tracker, but to get better in whatever aspect of life you’re focusing on.

Otherwise, the feelings of failure and guilt may lead you to stop your own improvement.

But Keep in Mind

“It gets easier. Every day it gets a little easier. But you gotta do it every day. That’s the hard part. But it does get easier.”

The pains of positive habit formation through self-discipline persist for quite a while. But they will disappear. Sure, they still crop up from time to time. However, since the new behavior has become a habit, controlling the urge to hit the snooze button or skip a daily task becomes way easier.

How to Combine Motivation and Self-Discipline for Better Results

We’ve already seen motivation and discipline – from their definitions to the advantages and disadvantages they bring. Yes, they’re like night and day. But did you know that these two are actually best friends?

Instead of pitting the two against each other, the following steps will show you how you can use both to power through your habit formation goals.

Start With Small, Manageable Daily Goals

Sabotaging your efforts by setting standards and goals that are out of your reach is the last thing you want to do. Instead, go for small and manageable daily goals.

Instead of saying “I will write for 2 hours every day,” set a 30-minute writing practice in the morning.

Want to get fit and muscular? Don’t go for the toughest workout program you can find on the internet. Start with 10 pushups/day instead.

Yes, 10 pushups/day won’t turn you to a modern-day Hercules. But starting small brings a couple of advantages. First, it reduces the perceived difficulty of the task, which is handy when motivation runs out.

Next, small tasks still help you build the self-discipline you will need to take on bigger goals. And last but not the least, you can always “up” the duration or difficulty of your exercise, writing, or reading routine when you’re ready.

Ride Out the Motivation Wave

The first 2 to 3 weeks of habit formation are often filled with motivation and excitement. And you’d do best to ride out that wave. If you feel like exceeding 30 minutes of focused writing, go ahead and write for as long as you’d like. Take this as an opportunity to make massive strides towards your goal.

But always remember:

Sitting down to work and getting things done won’t always feel exhilarating.

So savor today’s victory. Enjoy being motivated to achieve targets you’ve set for yourself. Just remember not to get addicted to it.

Don’t Kill the Motivation

Did you know that telling others of your goals, the new habits you want to form, or the positive changes you’re planning makes them less likely to happen?

You see, these announcements are often met with congratulations or a handshake followed with praises. And these social acknowledgments trick the brain into thinking that you’ve already hit your target.

The result:

The motivation to move forward plummets.

This phenomenon has been studied numerous times – from 1926 to 2009. And the results have always been the same. People who tell others their goals lose their drive and are less likely to achieve their vision.

We already know that motivation is fleeting. So why not keep it around for longer by staying silent and letting the results speak for themselves? 😉

Expect the Tough Days Ahead

At one point in your quest for self-improvement, motivation will run out.

Like in the scenarios in the motivation section, a bad event might leave your emotions in shambles. Your enthusiasm for the task may fluctuate. Or your mind may grow numb to the pleasures of getting things done.

You have to mentally prepare for the inevitable low-motivation days. Always keep in mind that those days are normal and that your emotional state shouldn’t get in the way of progress.

This will take willpower. But since you’ve set small and manageable daily goals, your self-discipline and control are less likely to be overwhelmed.

Reward Yourself and Renew Your Willpower

Self-discipline and willpower are like muscles. They also need a break after long bouts of exertion. Here are some tried and tested to recharge your mental batteries:

Mindfulness Meditation

A few minutes of meditation every day can boost one’s willpower by building up gray matter. Note, too, that the increase in gray matter happens in regions of the brain associated with decision-making and emotion regulation.

Get a Good Night’s Sleep

Sleeping soundly for 7 hours, at least, can help keep your prefrontal cortex in good shape. This region of the brain is essential for self-discipline as it deals with handling emotions, processing complex thoughts, and solving problems.

Reward Yourself

So you kept up your exercise routine for a week without skipping a beat? Good job! Now, go out and reward yourself. See a movie, take your spouse on a date, or dine at a new restaurant. Just make sure you’re munching on something healthy.

Rinse and Repeat for 66 Days

The journey towards positive habit formation and self-improvement requires cycling through these steps.

You’ll feel motivated sometimes and you would want to use the positive emotions to overachieve. On other days, emotion runs low and getting started on a task requires self-discipline. And when you’ve powered through a week of tasks using willpower, you will want to take a break and recharge.

But after the roller coaster ride lasting for 66 days, the new behavior becomes a habit. It becomes a part of you. And performing tasks which used a lot of mental fortitude will feel as easy and natural as breathing.

Congratulations! You just transformed yourself for the better.

– About the Writer –

Kevin Hilton is the lead marketer for CafePoint, a UK-based vending machine business. When not speaking to clients and networking with industry folks, he reads blogs like Life Optimizer to help bring out his A-game.

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Undone: How to Change Our Procrastination Patterns

By Leo Babauta

Procrastination starts from an avoidance of something from fear, then becomes a pattern that hardens into a habit.

We reinforce this procrastination habit through years of practice, and it hurts us in so many ways in our lives — not only with work tasks, but much more.

The procrastination habit affects:

  • Dealing with our finances head-on
  • Health habits (putting off exercise, for example)
  • Dealing with our health problems (putting it off makes it much worse)
  • Relationships (putting off difficult conversations)
  • Creating, art, meaningful work
  • Decluttering and simplifying
  • Being on time (and being late can cause us stress)
  • Learning new things

And much more. Those are just some of the most visible examples, but we procrastinate all day long, by checking our phones, favorite websites, email, messages, news, watching TV, playing games, and … well, you all know your favorite procrastination techniques.

So the question becomes, how do we stop hurting ourselves, after all these years? How do we start to unravel our hardened procrastination habits and create more helpful patterns?

The answer is to start thinking of these hardened patterns as grooves.

The Grooves of Our Habits

When you first procrastinated, you didn’t have a hardened pattern. You had a choice. You could do your homework (or pick up your toys, perhaps), or you could put that off until later and do something else that’s perhaps more fun.

You felt fear or resistance with one task, which made the other option more appealing. You chose the easy route, and that felt good in the moment. There was immediate reward. There was difficulty later, but that was something future you had to deal with.

All other choices like this were rewarded with immediate gratification. So by repeating this choice over and over, you start to wear a groove into the ground. After awhile, the reward isn’t even needed … the groove becomes so much easier to follow, and getting out of the groove is so much harder. The longer we keep sticking with the groove, the harder it is to change.

Habits are grooves. You stick to the old ones, until you’re willing to put in the effort to get out of the grooves and make new choices.

How do you get out of the groove you’ve made? Conscious effort.

How to Change Your Patterns, or Get Your Groove On

The steps of breaking out of a groove are simple, but they require concentrated effort:

  1. Decide that you’re tired of the old groove. The old groove isn’t serving you. It’s hurting you. When you decide you’re tired of hurting yourself with this particular patterns, you’re ready to change. Assess whether you’re ready right now.
  2. Commit to conscious change. When you’re ready to stop hurting yourself with the old pattern, make a commitment to practice and to be very conscious in changing your groove. Making the commitment to someone else, or a small group of friends or family, is a powerful way to commit.
  3. Set aside time for deliberate practice. You’re not going to change your groove haphazardly. You have to practice consciously and with deliberate effort. Set aside a small practice period each day — just 5 minutes to start with. Don’t put off the task of blocking off your practice period — remember, you’re deliberately practicing a new pattern! I recommend 5-10 minutes every day of the week, first thing in the morning before you check email or your phone or computer. Have a reminder where you will see it first thing in the morning.
  4. Set an intention for your practice. Before you start, tap into your reason by remembering why you’re practicing. In what ways is this hurting you in your life? Is it hurting your career, health, happiness, relationships, finances, meaningful work, your loved ones? Set an intention to practice in order to make these things better.
  5. Set yourself a task. Pick something you’ve been putting off (but perhaps not your hardest or most uncomfortable tasks to start with). Commit to doing that task for just 5 minutes.
  6. Let yourself do nothing else, and watch your patterns. Sit there and do nothing but that task, or do nothing at all. Notice when you have the urge to switch to something else, to get up and get away. Those are your old patterns showing themselves, which in itself is hugely valuable. But just observe the urges, without acting on them but also without judgment. Their just urges, just feelings that arise, not anything to worry about. Just watch, don’t act, just sit and face the urges. Then return to the task. Over and over, until this is your new groove.

It’s possible to create new grooves, new patterns, that serve you better. I’ve done it dozens of times in my life, perhaps more than a hundred in the last decade. I’m no stronger than anyone else, and so if I can do it, you can too.

The Undone Course

I’m launching a new video course today in my Sea Change Program called Undone: Reprogramming the Procrastination Habit.

I invite you to join us in this 4-week course, by joining Sea Change today.

Sea Change is my monthly membership program for changing habits, learning mindfulness and changing your life. Each month, we focus on something different, and this month it’s procrastination.

What you’ll get with this course:

  1. Two video lessons per week
  2. Exercises to work with your procrastination patterns mindfully
  3. A challenge to do these exercises a short time six days a week for the whole month
  4. A weekly check-in for the challenge so you stay accountable
  5. A live video webinar (for Gold members) and the ability to submit questions for me to answer

I encourage you to join me and have your efforts to change your old patterns be supported by me and more than a thousand other Sea Change members.

Join Sea Change today and start the course.

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5 Lies We Learned When We Were Younger (That We Still Live By Today)

5 Lies We Learned When We Were Younger

In 1914, the great inventor Thomas Edison experienced a devastating hardship.  His entire laboratory burned down to the ground, and several years worth of his work was ruined.

Newspapers described the situation as “the worst thing to happen to Edison.”

But that was a lie!

Edison didn’t see it that way at all.  The inventor instead chose to see his circumstances as an invigorating opportunity to rebuild and re-examine much of his current work.  In fact, Edison reportedly said shortly after the fire, “Thank goodness all our mistakes were burned up.  Now we can start again fresh.”  And that’s exactly what he and his team did.

Think about how this relates to your life.

How many times have you heard it was the end, when it was really the beginning?

How many hopeless labels have been slapped over the top of your inner hope?

How many lies were you fed by people when you were younger, that have driven you to call it quits on those hard days when Edison would have called their bluff?

Today, I challenge you to challenge the lies you’ve been fed over the years, starting with five of the most common lies we’ve helped our course students unlearn over the past decade… (more…)

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How to Tap Into the Enormous Benefits of a Regular Sleeping Cycle

Note: This post is written by Alex Moore

In our fast-paced, always-on society, sleep can feel like an enormous waste of time. With so much pressure to get ahead, work hard, and put in as many productive hours as humanly possible, it might feel hard to justify spending an entire third of every single day lying in bed doing nothing.

If that’s how you feel, though, you don’t really understand the importance of sleep.

As it turns out, sleeping is the furthest thing from doing nothing: it’s actually an important and valuable activity that scientists claim is at least as important to our survival as eating or drinking water.

If you can build a healthy sleep habit and know how to get the most out of your sleeping cycles, you will see enormous benefits in every area of your life which will more than make up for the time you “wasted” in bed.

The Importance of Sleep

Everyone has a vague idea of the consequences of getting or not getting enough sleep.

You either wake up feeling refreshed and energized or drowsy and bleary.

Given that you can overcome any amount of drowsiness with enough coffee, most people do not consider waking up tired that big of a deal.

Recent research, however, reveals that a sleep debt can have a surprising and dramatic range of negative health impacts:

  • Increased risk of viral infection, since the immune system lacks the resources to produce disease-fighting cytokines without sufficient rest;
  • Increased weight gain, as the appetite suppressant leptin is produced more during periods of sleep while the appetite stimulant ghrelin is produced less; people who do not sleep enough are more likely to eat more and to prefer unhealthy foods;
  • Higher risk of developing diabetes, due to the body’s inability to process insulin without sufficient sleep;
  • Higher blood pressure and increased risk of heart disease, since reduced heart activity during REM sleep is essential for cardiovascular health;
  • Increased risk of developing a mental illness, as neural pathways essential to normal brain activity are created and maintained during periods of deep sleep;
  • Early death, as a tired body is more vulnerable to complications of all types.

In addition to the long-term health risks of poor sleep, a restless night can also have immediate consequences.

The day after getting insufficient sleep, a person experiences poor focus and slower thinking, and is more likely to make poor decisions or take unnecessary risks.

They are also more likely to feel unhappy and irritable, and chronic poor sleep is even linked to the onset of depression.

On the other hand, a person who is well-rested will benefit from a heightened ability to learn new information and a greater recall of information that was previously learned.

In addition, after getting a good night’s sleep you will feel happier and more energetic.

Celebrity singer Beyoncé, claims that getting enough sleep is her secret to always looking and feeling her best.

Understanding Sleep Cycles

Sleep is broadly divided into REM sleep and non-REM sleep, which is further divided into three distinct stages.

The conventional wisdom is that REM sleep is the sleep that really matters, but healthy sleeping cycles actually consist of every stage in the right amount.

  • Stage one non-REM sleep is very light and it is easy to wake up from this stage. The body begins to relax and muscles move more slowly.
  • Roughly half the night should be spent in stage two non-REM sleep, in which brain waves begin to slow.
  • Stage three non-REM sleep is extremely deep and difficult to awaken from. This is the restorative stage of sleep, and you must get enough of it to feel rested.
  • REM sleep should occur about 90 minutes after you fall asleep. Your eyes move quickly and your body is paralyzed as you begin to dream. REM sleep is when your brain sorts and stores information acquired throughout the day, and sufficient REM sleep is absolutely essential to learning and memory.

Building a Healthy Sleep Habit

Here are six tips on building a healthy sleep habit.

1. Sleep for eight whole hours.

Your body naturally alternates between the various sleeping cycles throughout the night, and spends more time in the REM stage the longer you are asleep. That is why it is essential to sleep for a full eight hours every night, and why missing even a single hour of sleep can leave you feeling as if you hadn’t slept at all.

The first step in building a healthy sleep habit is accepting that you need eight hours every night and making sure you prioritize it on your schedule.

2. Manage your time.

You may see this as bad time management, but keep in mind that good time management is doing a few things well, not doing a lot of things poorly.

Getting enough sleep will ensure that you are at your best when you take on any other task. Serial entrepreneur and lifestyle guru Timothy Ferriss calls quality sleep “the currency of high-performance living.”

It is easy to get the right amount of sleep you need if you fall asleep and wake up at the same time every day.

3. Unwind before you go to sleep.

In addition to scheduling eight hours for sleep, you should also schedule at least half an hour of relaxing activity to allow you to wind down before sleep.

This activity can include reading or listening to music, or taking a hot bath which will cause your body temperature to drop and naturally make you feel drowsy.

4. Create a dreamy sleeping environment.

A good sleeping environment is essential to getting quality sleep. It should be free of noise and light, as well as any electronics including computers and phones.

There should not be a visible clock face in the room where you sleep. Your mattress and pillow should be as comfortable as possible.

Experiment with different levels of softness or firmness, and consider using side sleeping pillows for additional comfort.

5. Keep your fitness routine for daytime hours.

While aerobic exercise during the day has been proven to improve the quality of sleep, you should refrain from exercising within three hours of going to bed.

6. Eliminate energizers.

You should also avoid eating or imbibing alcohol during this period and limit the amount of fluids consumed of all kinds.

If you drink caffeine, you should limit it to the morning hours, as stimulants can actually disrupt your sleep for eight or more hours after they are consumed.

Author bio: Alex Moore is the writer behind Side Sleeper Guide. Com. He wants to help sleepers find a personalized level of sleeping comfort, thus, is continuously researching and sharing the latest studies on sleep cycles, relaxation and concentration. For more of Alex’s work, visit his Twitter.

Related Resources

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I’m 37 Today (So You Get 37% Off on All My Courses for the Next 72 Hours)

Today is my 37th birthday.

And I want to do something fun to celebrate that and to thank you for all your kindness and support over this past year.

So you can get any of my 7 digital and downloadable courses and guides at a 37 percent discount for the next 72 hours.

This offer is only available until 1.00 p.m EDT (that’s 17.00 GMT) Thursday the 30th of March.

I’m off to celebrate a bit now, have a wonderful day and check out the information below to learn more about the courses and guides.

********

You can get any of these downloadable courses and guides with one of the major credit cards or money in your Paypal or Amazon account.

The Stop Worrying Today Course

Stop Worrying TodayMy latest course is now open again for registration and will stay that way until Thursday.

In it we spend 7 weeks on examining and understanding your own worry and replacing it with better and more helpful daily and weekly routines and habits.

You’ll for instance learn how to:

  • Use the same small, 3-step method I use to put a stop to a worry in about 2 minutes so that I can relax and fully put my focus and energy into what I want.
  • Start your day with a morning routine that only takes a few minutes and will get you off to a day of less worries popping up in the first place.
  • Work through and overcome persistent worries by using a step-by-step exercise that will help you to finally see the situation and what you can do about it with clear eyes.

Click here to learn more and to join the Stop Worrying Today Course

The Stop Procrastinating Now Course

Stop Procrastinating NowThis course on one of the most common issues people face is now open again for registration and will stay that way until Thursday.

In this 10-week course you’ll, for example, learn how to:

  • Understand the 7 basic reasons for procrastination. So you can understand yourself better and where you need put your attention.
  • Find the crucial balance between doing fully focused work and having plenty of guilt-free rest and play.
  • Setup your daily work environment in just a few minutes to keep the distractions to a minimum and your focus sharp.
  • Overcome the 4 fundamental fears that drive us to procrastination step-by-step. So you can take action on what you deep down want and not be held back any longer.

Click here to learn more and to join the Stop Procrastinating Now Course

The Self-Esteem Course

This 12-week course is my most popular product so far.

In it you’ll learn how to:

  • Deep down feel like you truly trust yourself to be able to handle life and making the important decisions and that you deserve to have and to get more good and awesome things in your life.
  • Finally lay off and overcome your own most self-critical and most self-esteem damaging thought habits such as perfectionism and comparing yourself to others.
  • Learn to handle mistakes, failure and criticism in healthy way that preserves your self-esteem.

Plus a whole lot more. The course includes one written guide, one audio version of that guide and one worksheet for each of the 12 weeks.

Click here to learn more and to join the Self-Esteem Course

The Smart Social Skills Course

The Smart Social Skills Course is all about improving your social skills and relationships.

In this course you will learn how to:

  • Be calmly confident in any kind of social situation.
  • Understand and adopt the giving and positive attitude that makes any relationship or conversation better and more rewarding.
  • Find more happiness, fun and enjoyment in both new and old relationships and in your daily conversations.

And much, much more.

Click here to learn more about The Smart Social Skills Course and to join it

The Invincible Summer Course

The Invincible Summer is an 8-week course in developing a resilient outlook of optimism.

In it you will learn how to:

  • Keep your enthusiasm up and to keep going despite setbacks and mistakes.
  • Face uncertainty or a tough time in life and react and act in an level-headed and constructive way.
  • Overcome the destructive victim mentality and self-doubt.

And a lot more that will fuel your mind and life with positivity. The course includes one written guide, one audio version of that guide and one worksheet for each of the 8 weeks.

Click here to learn more and to join The Invincible Summer Course

31 Days to a Simpler Life

This course is designed to make you think about how you live your life.

But more importantly, it’s designed to make you DO things. To do one task each day for 31 days to simplify your life step by step.

31 Days to a Simpler Life will for example help you to keep your focus on what is truly most meaningful and important in your life. It will help you to declutter your home, workspace and other cluttered areas in your life. And to uncomplicate your social life and schedule.

Click here to learn more about 31 Days to a Simpler Life and to join it

The Art of Relaxed Productivity

The Art of Relaxed Productivity is all about becoming a more focused person and getting more of the most important things done with less stress.

In it you’ll learn how to:

  • Get out of the overwhelm and stress of living in today’s society and at the same time get the most important things done consistently every day.
  • Boost your motivation and use simple techniques to pick yourself up from a motivational slump.
  • Improve your self-discipline so that you keep moving towards what you want not just once in a while, but every day.

Click here to learn more about the Art of Relaxed Productivity and to get your copy

http://ift.tt/2oqHfWZ

The Main Reason Changing Your Life is Tough

By Leo Babauta

Many of us have things we’d like to change: our exercise and diet habits, procrastination and productivity habits, patience and mindfulness habits, quitting bad habits, decluttering and finances, reading and learning and doing all the things we want to do in life.

But very often we fall short of our hopes.

What’s the problem? Why do we struggle with these changes?

There are lots of reasons, some of them external … but the main reason that it’s difficult to stick to these changes is actually internal.

The main reason changing our lives is hard: we get in our own way.

How? Our thinking is the problem. See if you’ve done any of these:

  • You mess up or procrastinate on your habit changes, and then are harsh or critical on yourself.
  • It’s time to do what you set out to do, but then you put it off and look for something easier. You go to distractions.
  • You are doing something uncomfortable but then look for a way out, tell yourself you can’t do it.
  • When you’re doing something hard, you stress out about it, setting unreasonable expectations and agonizing about whether you can do it.
  • You fantasize about how this will turn out when you meet your goal, but then worry and stress out about whether you will hit that goal.
  • You feel bad about yourself, doubt yourself, beat yourself up … and this prevents you from even taking action.

I think most of us have done these at some time or another, often without even being aware of it. We get in our own way, make things more difficult than they already are.

Why We Get in Our Own Way

Why do we do this, if we’re just making things harder? These are old patterns, built up over the years, that are coping mechanisms for dealing with difficulty.

The reasons we go to the patterns mentioned above:

  • We have lots of uncertainty or discomfort about the task or project, so we look for a way out, and start to rationalize and look for something easier.
  • We create high expectations (our goals, ideals, fantasies) and then fear not meeting those expectations (more uncertainty).
  • We don’t believe in ourselves because we doubt whether we’re good enough to do it (uncertainty about ourselves).
  • Being harsh on ourselves for procrastinating or messing up is a way to deal with the uncertainty that arises when we do these things.

So some kind of uncertainty arises: about ourselves, about how we just procrastinated, about how this project will go, about how to go about doing this task, about whether we’ll meet our goal.

Then we react to this uncomfortable feeling of uncertainty by being reactive: by being critical of ourselves, stressing out about it, procrastinating and seeking distraction, rationalizing why we should quit. These are old patterns, how we cope with the discomfort of uncertainty.

It doesn’t feel good to take these actions, but it’s a natural reaction to the scary feelings of uncertainty. There’s more comfort and certainty in our distractions, running away, self-criticism, harshness, stories about not being able to do this.

The discomfort of uncertainty is what we want to get away from. We get in our own way by trying to get away from feelings of uncertainty.

Getting Out of Our Own Way

So how do we stop getting in our own way?

By getting out of our way.

When we notice that we’re procrastinating, seeking distraction, being harsh or critical, rationalizing quitting or putting something off, stressing out about not being able to do something … we should pause. Just notice what we’re doing.

Then think about how we’re just making things harder. We can make things more effortless by not reacting to the uncertainty.

Instead, notice the feeling of uncertainty in your body. See that it’s there and that you want to get away from it or get control of it. Stay with it and see that it’s just a feeling, nothing to panic about.

In fact, by practicing the mindfulness of staying with discomfort and uncertainty, we can learn to be comfortable with uncertainty.

As we do this, we can just turn back to the task and act. Just simply be with the task, and just take action. Just do.

If we’re procrastinating with a writing task, we can just stop running and instead allow ourselves to feel the uncertainty. Then just start writing, without worrying about running from uncertainty.

If we are beating ourselves up because we haven’t done a good job sticking to a plan, we can notice that we’re being harsh, and instead allow ourselves to feel the uncertainty about ourselves. Then just start again on the plan, letting go of what happened and starting afresh without stress.

If we are stressing out about not meeting a goal or expectation, we can notice that we have uncertainty about this goal, and just stay with it. Then just take action on the goal without worrying about the expectation.

Notice the uncertainty and our desire to run. Stay with it and don’t run. Then act, with gratitude and a smile. We don’t have to get in our way, things can be no big deal.

My Dealing with Struggles Course

If you’d like help with getting out of your own way, I’ve just launched a new video course called Dealing with Struggles, and I invite you to join me for four weeks.

It’s two video lessons a week, and mindfulness exercises to practice with each lesson. You’ll also be able to ask me questions that I’ll answer in videos and articles, and discuss the lessons and your struggles with other participants in a Facebook discussion group.

In addition, I’m offering five bonus ebooks that I’ve written:

  1. Beginner’s Guide to Mindfulness
  2. Essential Zen Habits
  3. Little Book of Contentment
  4. The One Skill – How Mastering the Art of Letting Go Will Change Your Life
  5. Focus: A Simplicity Manifesto in the Age of Distraction

I hope you’ll join me.

Check Out the Course

http://ift.tt/2naxhZH

20 Beliefs You Will Gradually Let Go of Over the Next 20 Years

20 Beliefs You Will Gradually Let Go of Over the Next 20 Years

The afternoon always understands what the morning never even suspected.

Everyone tells a story about themselves inside their own head.

Every day.  All the time.

YOU are telling yourself a story right now.

And this story is simply a collection of beliefs that ultimately makes you what you are – it lays the foundation for every action you take or don’t take in life.  In essence, you build yourself out of this story, one day at a time.

For a while, everything aligns just fine, or so it seems, and life is good.

But then, at some point, perhaps sometime in your thirties, forties or fifties, you get slapped with a harsh reality that (more…)

http://ift.tt/2n74N28