Hey girl, start waking up at the crack of dawn so you can get all of your important tasks done early and then have the rest of the day to just “dilly dally.” And no, I don’t mean 8 or 9am. I mean 3:30 or 4am.
There’s something powerful about being up before the rest of the world. No distractions. No notifications. No noise. Just you, your thoughts, and your to-do list. That kind of quiet time is rare — and when you use it intentionally, it can completely shift your life.
Why early mornings matter
When you wake up early, you’re not starting your day in reaction mode. You’re not rushing, stressed, or already behind. Instead, you’re setting the tone. By the time everyone else is just rolling out of bed, you’ve already prayed, journaled, worked out, planned your day, or knocked out your biggest priorities.
That creates momentum. And momentum is what makes you feel unstoppable.
The discipline behind it
Yes, it sounds extreme — 3:30 or 4am is not for the faint of heart. But discipline is what separates wishing for change from actually creating it. Waking up early isn’t about punishing yourself; it’s about giving yourself the gift of uninterrupted time.
Think of it like this: if you can master your mornings, you can master your life.
What to do with those hours
You don’t need to cram everything into those early hours. Use them for what matters most:
- Spending quiet time with God.
- Journaling or affirmations.
- Planning your day without distractions.
- Working on your biggest personal or business goal before the world wakes up.
- Moving your body, even if it’s just a walk or a stretch.
The point isn’t to do everything — it’s to start your day grounded and ahead.
You’ll thank yourself later
It’s not easy at first, but like anything else, it becomes a habit. And once it does, you’ll look back and realize how much those extra hours transformed your life.
So hey girl, set that alarm for earlier than feels comfortable, and give yourself the chance to see what life feels like when you’re living ahead of the noise. Stick to it, and you’ll thank me later. 🫶🏽
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