
3 morning routines to try in order to get a good start to the day
In recent months, these morning routines, which often require an earlier start to the day, have been gaining a growing following around the world. And people are extolling the virtues of these new morning habits in terms of energy, productivity and well-being.
While it's not always easy to adopt such a routine, due to professional constraints and accumulated fatigue, a holiday can be the ideal time to introduce new habits gradually.
Here are three morning routines, recommended by social media or by scientists, which could help boost your energy levels and maintain your mental health in the long term. 1. Slow morning, gentle start
Gone are the days of waking up to an aggressive alarm then rushing out of bed. It's time to try a gentler, slower pace, just as you would on vacation. This is the aim of the 'slow morning' – a morning routine that has been gaining a following on social networks since the spring.
The idea is simple: Take a moment to relax and refocus on yourself, instead of running around as soon as you get out of bed. This is a morning routine that reduces stress levels and allows you to enjoy the pleasures of daily life to the full, away from the hectic pace of the day ahead.
Conceptualised by American coach and lecturer Hal Elrod in his book Miracle Morning, this method is inspired by the 'slow living' philosophy known for its mental health benefits.
Unlike other rituals of this type, there are no specific rules, apart from listening to your own needs. Morning activities could involve a meditation session, stretching, listening to relaxing music, taking a long, soothing shower, or simply switching off temporarily from social networks.
No time for breakfast? Then perhaps you need to adopt the '5-to-9' routine, where you start your day really early. — Pixabay
Although totally opposed to the slow morning, the '5-to-9 morning routine' promises similar benefits in terms of well-being. Originating on social networks, this daily ritual requires strict discipline in terms of nutrition, sleep and physical activity, and is based on the idea that people are more productive in the morning.
True or false, it doesn't really matter in the eyes of those who have adopted it and who are constantly singing its praises. And there seems to be plenty of them, since the associated hashtags have generated tens of millions of views on social media.
In concrete terms, it involves getting up at 5am to indulge in all kinds of activities – preferably those beneficial to physical and mental health – before heading off to work.
These include swapping a hurried breakfast for a healthy meal of freshly squeezed juice, smoothies, fresh fruit and other such fare, followed by a workout and/or meditation session, a morning walk, reading a book and taking the time to get ready before leaving home.
This morning routine allows for more peaceful, less stressful evenings, without compromising on a healthy lifestyle.
Contrary to popular belief, some people are naturally more active later in the day. So this morning routine may not be for everyone, especially as it's vital to satisfy your own personal sleep needs.
Test this routine in the summer, and you'll find out whether or not it's really worth adopting all year round.
But maybe science should have the final word on the matter. Research funded by cereal company Kellogg's in honour of their Special K brand and published in 2022, revealed a mathematical formula for getting out of bed on the right foot and being in a good mood all day long.
Specifically, renowned mathematician Anne-Marie Imafidon analysed responses to a survey of 2,000 people in Britain to create a complex formula for a morning routine considered ideal.
According to her research, this would involve waking up at 6.44am and getting out of bed by 7.12am at the latest, followed by 21 minutes of physical exercise, a 10-minute shower and 18 minutes having breakfast.
The beauty of this formula is that it can be used to tailor this routine to individual circumstances.
To find out whether your current routine is beneficial to your well-being, multiply the time spent eating breakfast by two, then add it to the time spent exercising and showering. Keep this first result in mind.
Next, subtract the number of hours spent sleeping from eight, then add one, and multiply this figure by the difference between the time you got up and 7.12 (to which you add another one).
Then, take the first result and divide it by the second, and – as a final step – add the number of minutes spent on another morning activity divided by two. If the number obtained is greater than 37, your routine is considered effective; if not, you'll probably need to make some changes. – AFP Relaxnews

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Star
3 days ago
- The Star
Ex-teacher hoards 32 tonnes of rubbish
Compiled by CHARLES RAMENDRAN, TAN SIN CHOW and R. ARAVINTHAN A FORMER teacher landed himself in trouble with the authorities for hoarding rubbish at his house in Taman Sentosa in Johor Baru, Harian Metro reported. The hoarder had filled his two-storey house with more than 32 tonnes of rubbish over the course of three decades, which posed a health hazard to himself and his neighbours. Following neighbours' complaints of a bad stench emanating from the house, the Johor Baru City Council (MBJB) issued a notice to the man and carried out a massive clean up with the help of 35 volunteers. Workers also found the place infested with termites, snakes, rats and cockroaches. MBJB councillor Sally Ng said the man claimed the items he had stored were worth RM8,000. To make the man happy, she said, the volunteers gathered recyclable items found in the house but learnt that it could only fetch less than RM1,000. Ng said she will persuade the man to seek help for his mental health. 'He had previously turned down an offer to be placed at a home run by the Welfare Department,' she said. > The burden of caring for sick family members often takes a toll on the emotional and physical wellbeing of caregivers. Local actress Diana Danielle Danny Beeson, also known as Diana Danielle, shared her experience. She said having mixed feelings and facing a myriad of situations can test the patience of caregivers. Although the 33-year-old American-born actress did not divulge details, it is understood that she was referring to her experience of caring for her cancer-stricken mother, Utusan Malaysia reported. She had to skip school for a year to do so when she was just 13 years old. 'It really tests one's patience and can sometimes cause siblings to fight. 'We are also burdened with the fear of losing the family member, especially when the person is the backbone of the family. 'Everyone has different experiences caring for the sick. For me, the biggest challenge was the financial aspect of it,' Diana recalled. Since her mother Norsiah Ramli could not work at the time due to her illness, life was tough for Diana, who ended up living with family and friends and surviving on small portions of sliced bread and instant noodles. She said as a caregiver, she could not break down and be emotional as she had to show strength to comfort her mother. Diana advised those visiting the sick to also take time to show concern for the emotional wellbeing of caregivers. 'Caregivers also need space to express their feelings, especially when they are fatigued,' she said. The above articles are compiled from the vernacular newspapers (Bahasa Malaysia, Chinese and Tamil dailies). As such, stories are grouped according to the respective language/medium. Where a paragraph begins with a >, it denotes a separate news item.


The Sun
4 days ago
- The Sun
Trump pressures 17 pharma CEOs to cut US drug prices
WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump sent letters to the leaders of 17 major pharmaceutical companies outlining how they should slash U.S. prescription drug prices to match those paid overseas, the White House said on Thursday. Trump signed a sweeping executive order in May demanding drugmakers cut U.S. medicine prices to match those abroad, saying that if companies did not comply, the government could use rulemaking to bring prices down or pursue other measures, such as importing cheaper medicines from overseas. Trump sent the letters to the chief executives of Eli Lilly , Sanofi, Regeneron, Merck & Co , Johnson & Johnson, and AstraZeneca, among others, the White House said. 'Most proposals my Administration has received to 'resolve' this critical issue promised more of the same; shifting blame and requesting policy changes that would result in billions of dollars in handouts to industry,' Trump wrote in the letters, copies of which were posted on his Truth Social account. Shares of Pfizer, Eli Lilly and Gilead Sciences closed down about 2% each, while the NYSE Arca Pharmaceutical Index fell 3% on Thursday. Trump called on drugmakers to provide so-called most-favored-nation prices to every patient enrolled in the government Medicaid health program for low-income people, and to guarantee such pricing for new drugs. The policy is aimed at cutting U.S. prescription drug prices to the lowest possible price paid by members of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, which includes most of the world's largest economies. Trump also said companies must return excess overseas revenue from raising prices in other countries to offset lower prices in the U.S. to American patients and taxpayers through an agreement with the government. He is requiring drugmakers to stipulate they would not offer other developed nations better prices than what they offer the United States, and said his administration would provide ways to cut out middlemen and sell directly to patients, provided they do so at most-favored-nation prices. Trump gave companies until September 29 to respond with binding commitments to those terms. 'If you refuse to step up, we will deploy every tool in our arsenal to protect Americans from abusive drug pricing practices,' he warned. Analysts, lobbyists and drug pricing experts said it seemed unlikely that the pharmaceutical companies would comply with Trump's demand to lower U.S. prices. 'I might expect them to try to determine if any of their current products might be made available via direct sales (one of the requests) at a lower price than currently available in the U.S.,' said Stacie Dusetzina, professor of health policy at Nashville's Vanderbilt University. UBS analyst Trung Huynh said Trump's letters were a repeat of earlier demands and played down any likely industry impact, calling it 'just another shot in the dark.' Trump has already pushed for voluntary changes and some companies have pledged to build new U.S. manufacturing plants. U.S. patients pay by far the most for prescription medicines, often nearly three times more than in other developed nations. The country also invests heavily in pharmaceutical research and development. Drugmakers have said drastic price cuts would stifle innovation. Pharmaceutical companies including Pfizer, Novartis , AbbVie, and German Merck KGaA's U.S. division, EMD Serono, said they were open to working with the Trump administration. Pfizer is working closely with the Trump Administration and Congress to improve access and affordability for American patients, said spokeswoman Amy Rose. 'Our discussions have been productive,' she said-REUTERS


The Star
6 days ago
- The Star
Explainer-What is CTE and its connection to the NFL and other contact sports?
FILE PHOTO: Oversized football helmets surround the convention center as the city hosts Super Bowl LIIV in Miami, Florida, U.S., January 31, 2020. REUTERS/Mike Blake/File Photo NEW YORK (Reuters) -A gunman who opened fire in a Midtown Manhattan office building on Monday believed he suffered a brain injury that he blamed on the National Football League, New York's mayor said, thrusting the issue of chronic traumatic encephalopathy back into headlines this week. According to police, Shane Tamura, a 27-year-old former high school football player with a history of mental illness, killed four people with an assault rifle in a Park Avenue office tower that houses NFL headquarters before shooting himself in the chest. The following is a breakdown of what CTE is and its relationship to contact sports. WHAT IS CTE? CTE is a degenerative disease caused by repeated impacts to the head, including both concussive and asymptomatic non-concussive hits. Doctors are only able to make a confirmed diagnosis after death, though common symptoms including aggression and dementia may surface while a patient is living. WHAT IS THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE NFL AND CTE? Research has found a connection between CTE and athletes who have competed in tackle football at both the professional and amateur levels. The NFL has acknowledged a link between football-related concussions and CTE. In 2015, the league agreed to a roughly $1-billion settlement for concussion-related lawsuits with thousands of retired players after the deaths of some high-profile players. Boston University's CTE Center diagnosed 345 former NFL players with CTE out of 376 studied, as of 2023. "If they've been exposed to football for a long time, that increases their risk," Dr. Ann McKee, director of the CTE Center, told Reuters. DID TAMURA PLAY IN THE NFL? Tamura did not compete in the NFL, the highest level of professional American football, but played at a Los Angeles charter school until graduating in 2016. WHAT ARE SOME EXAMPLES OF CTE AMONG FORMER PLAYERS? Junior Seau, a 12-time Pro Bowl linebacker and Hall of Famer, died by suicide in 2012. A study of his brain later showed he had suffered from CTE, a case that accelerated the national conversation around brain injuries in the NFL. Former New England Patriots player Aaron Hernandez, who was found guilty of first-degree murder in 2015 and died by suicide in prison in 2017, was found to have pronounced signs of the disease, according to Boston University findings. Ex-NFL player Phillip Adams gunned down six people and himself in 2021. McKee found he had suffered Stage 2 CTE after examining his brain. WHAT HAS THE NFL DONE TO MITIGATE BRAIN INJURIES? Concussions fell to a record low during the most recent NFL season, with the league crediting improvements in helmet technology as well as rule changes for the decline. Enhanced concussion protocols were implemented in 2022 after the NFL faced intense criticism over head injuries suffered by Miami Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa. The league previously banned dangerous helmet-to-helmet hits. But some researchers, including McKee, have said the measures fall short. "They have addressed concussion, but that's the tip of the iceberg. The real issue is the asymptomatic hits to the head that don't cause concussion, and there's been very little done to address that," said McKee. WHAT ABOUT OTHER SPORTS? Researchers have identified a connection between CTE and other sports, including rugby, ice hockey, and soccer. A group action in the United Kingdom involves more than 1,000 mostly former rugby players, including many high-profile internationals, who say the sport's governing bodies failed to do enough to protect them from potential brain injuries despite being aware of the risks. World Rugby, the sport's governing body, has introduced a series of player welfare measures in recent years in an attempt to minimize concussions and head injuriesin the sport. (Reporting by Amy Tennery in New York, additional reporting by Thomas Rowe and Mitch Phillips; Editing by Frank McGurty and Rod Nickel)