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Master Your Mindset and Jumpstart your Writing

November 21, 2017

 

 

Note From Rochelle

 

Dear Readers,

 

This week we celebrate the American Thanksgiving and the kick off to the holiday season. I hope you will carve out time this holiday season to reflect on your life and write!

 

Today’s post is an excerpt from my soon-to-be-released new book, Level Up—a series of quests designed to help writers discover how, when, and where they write best. In this quest, you’ll have the opportunity to design a morning routine that will pump up your productivity.

 

Enjoy!

Rochelle

 

Master Your Mindset and Jumpstart your Writing

by Rochelle Melander

 

 

“Good morning, Eeyore,” said Pooh.
“Good morning, Pooh Bear,” said Eeyore gloomily. “If it IS a good morning,” he said. “Which I doubt,” said he.

–A. A. Milne, Winnie the Pooh

 

When I set the goal of reframing my mindset, my colleague Sarah Schwab asked me, “How will you systemize that?” I’d been practicing the Bob Newhart method of overcoming a negative mindset. Every time I noticed that my thoughts were unhelpful, I told myself to “stop it!”

 

After I confessed that my method wasn’t working well, my colleague suggested I try a morning routine recommended by Tony Robbins. Each morning, I take a 30-minute walk. I devote the first ten minutes to being grateful for the gifts in my life. For the second ten minutes, I vision what I will accomplish during the day, sometimes even planning the scene or chapter I will be writing that morning. The key to this is to treat this as if you’ve already achieved it. Finally, I spend the last ten minutes practicing what Tony Robbins calls “incantation” or saying positive mantras that will help me enact my vision.

 

At first, I felt awkward working through this routine on my morning walks. But it sure beat my regular habit of obsessing over past mistakes and worrying about the future. After a time, the morning routine became a habit, and when I am unable to do it, I miss it.

 

In this quest, you’ll create your own morning mindset routine and practice it for several weeks. Trust me: it will change your life.

 

The Quest

Morning mindset routines can help us reset our mindset, increase our feelings of well-being, and get stuff done. In this quest, you will choose from helpful mindset tools and design the ritual that works best for you.

 

Practices to avoid:

Most mindset writers agree that when we do any of the following practices first thing in the morning, it can create a negative mindset or trigger monkey mind: watching or listening to news, checking email, surfing social media, and texting.

 

Practices to consider including:

The following tools are often part of a healthy morning routine. Choose 2-5 of the following ingredients and play with combining them in an order that works for you. When you find the magic combination, practice it for a week or two and see how it affects your writing.

 

Healthy Practices

The following practices appear in random order

Water

Healthy food

Essential oils

Exercise (walking, running, yoga, light stretching)

Meditation

Gratitude (verbal or written)

Reading (spiritual essays, artistic essays, poetry, personal development, or other affirming literature)

Prayer (written or verbal, traditional prayers or mantras)

Journaling (morning pages; gratitude; day, week, or life planning; mantras)

 

Game Play Tips

+Play with the practices. Try different practices, vary the order you do them in or how you complete them. Even small tweaks can make a big difference.

+Combine well. I can’t sit still in the morning, so combining my morning meditation ritual with walking has helped me focus. Consider how you can combine healthy rituals to get more out of your morning routine.

+Give these practices time to work. It often takes 2-3 weeks before a routine can feel, well, routine! And it’s in the midst of nourishing routines that we often get our “aha!” moments.

+Change your routine with the season, event, or project. Different circumstances require different routines. It can be helpful to have routines for unique circumstances—such as a change of season, being stuck inside with a virus, holidays, and big projects.

 

Wrap up

Our mindset can make a huge difference in how we approach and appreciate life. When we transform a small part of our day, we ignite a process that can transform our entire day. As Jillian Michaels said,

Transformation is not five minutes from now; it’s a present activity. In this moment you can make a different choice, and it’s these small choices and successes that build up over time to help cultivate a healthy self image and self esteem. –Jillian Michaels

How do you start your day?

Leave your comment below!

2 Responses

  1. I thrive on routines. I am unfocused, unproductive, and unhappy when I am out of any sort of routine. I leave the house thee days a week to have quite reading, journaling time before I get to the Y for water aerobics with other early birds. Three other days a week I’m up and either walking or reading for the first hour of the day. That rythym has worked well for six years now. Thanks for another great post.

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