An effective routine isn’t imposed on the self. It’s distilled.
This is the difference between routines that hold up and those that collapse after a few days. When a routine fails, we blame weak willpower. But the real culprit is often elsewhere: the routine itself was wrongly distilled from the start.
Why most routines fail
Too ambitious from day one
The model routine is conceived as a full ideal day. Picture the typical version: early wakeup, exercise, reading, writing, meditation. Everything together. This routine is doomed for a typical day, and typical days are rare.
Built on motivation
The deepest mistake: relying on motivation to execute the routine. Motivation is strong on decision day, weak days later. A routine that needs motivation to work is a routine waiting to collapse.
The routine as a system
In my framework, continuity, the second pillar, is precisely transforming intention into a structure that doesn’t depend on motivation. A new routine needs structure to function rather than a willpower test.
How to build a working routine
1. Start small
One anchor or two. Not ten. Small is what survives a normal day.
2. Anchor it to a fixed time
After waking up directly, for example. A fixed time turns action into a habit.
3. Allow for exceptions
A weak day doesn’t ruin the routine. Forgiving it is more important than perfecting it.
What’s next?
A working routine is a simple system that recurs. Mastering it is what continuity demands, and opens the door before mastery.
Next step: Read the Method
Frequently Asked Questions
How many anchors should the routine include?
Start with one or two. Add gradually after they stick.
What if I miss a session?
Resume without judgment. The model routine doesn’t exist. Returning matters more than perfection.
Is a routine fixed forever?
No. It evolves with time. Adjust it when circumstances change.



