I used to think “being inspired” meant waking up like some movie character.
You know the type—sunlight hits their face perfectly, they stretch like a cat, smile for no reason, drink lemon water (??), and then go conquer life before 9 AM.
Meanwhile, I was waking up like—
Phone alarm screaming.
Me hitting snooze like it owes me money.
Somehow more tired than when I went to bed.
You ever wake up already exhausted? Like… how does that even happen?
Anyway, I kept waiting for that magical spark of inspiration to show up and fix everything.
Spoiler: it didn’t.
Turns out, inspiration isn’t a lightning bolt. It’s more like… a bunch of tiny, slightly awkward habits that slowly wake your brain up and go, “hey, we’re alive, maybe let’s try today?”
?? First Realization: Energy Comes Before Focus (Not the Other Way Around)
I used to sit at my desk thinking:
“Okay. Focus. Focus. Be productive. Why am I not focusing??”
Meanwhile my brain was basically buffering like bad Wi-Fi.
No energy = no focus.
Simple. Obvious. Took me way too long to accept.
So instead of forcing focus, I started asking:
“How do I feel right now?”
Usually the answer was:
“Like a potato.”
So I built little inspiration practices—not big dramatic routines, just small things—to shift my energy first.
Because once your energy moves, your focus kinda follows like a confused puppy.
?? Inspiration Practice #1: The “Don’t Touch Your Phone” Rule (I Fail This One a Lot)
Okay listen.
I know. I KNOW.
Telling someone not to check their phone in the morning is like telling a cat not to knock things off the table.
But the days I don’t grab my phone immediately?
Completely different vibe.
Instead of absorbing 47 random opinions, emails, and memes before my brain even wakes up… I get like 10–15 minutes of actual silence.
Sometimes I just sit there.
Sometimes I stare at the ceiling like I’m solving life. (I’m not.)
Sometimes I think about what I want from the day instead of reacting to everything.
It’s weirdly powerful.
Also slightly uncomfortable. Which probably means it’s working.

?? Inspiration Practice #2: Move Your Body (But Don’t Make It a Whole Thing)
I used to think “morning movement” meant a full workout.
Like… gym, sweat, commitment, suffering.
No thanks.
Now? I literally just… move.
- Stretch for like 2 minutes
- Walk around the block
- Dance badly to one song (highly recommend, zero skill required)
That’s it.
And somehow, it wakes me up more than coffee sometimes. (Okay not more, let’s not get crazy—but close.)
It’s like telling your body:
“Hey. We’re doing stuff today.”
And your body goes, “Oh okay cool, I’ll turn on now.”
?? Inspiration Practice #3: Create a “Low-Pressure Start”
This one saved me.
Instead of jumping straight into serious work, I start with something easy and kinda enjoyable.
Like:
- Writing random thoughts
- Reading a few pages of something interesting
- Organizing my desk (or pretending to)
Basically… easing into the day instead of attacking it.
Because when I tried to start with the hardest task first?
My brain would just go:
“Absolutely not.”
And then I’d procrastinate for 2 hours and feel guilty about it.
So yeah. Low-pressure starts > aggressive productivity fantasies.
A Random Story (Because My Brain Just Went There)
Back in college, I had this professor who said something like:
“If you wait until you feel ready, you’ll be waiting forever.”
At the time, I nodded like I understood.
I did not understand.
Now I do. Unfortunately.
?? Inspiration Practice #4: Change Your Input = Change Your Energy
What you consume matters.
Like… a lot.
If I start my day scrolling through stressful news, negative posts, or people arguing about things that don’t affect my life…
Guess what my brain feels like?
Heavy. Scattered. Slightly annoyed at everything.
But if I swap that with:
- Music that hypes me up
- A podcast that makes me think
- Something funny (very important)
My energy shifts instantly.
It’s kinda wild.
You don’t need motivation—you need better inputs.

?? Inspiration Practice #5: The “One Thing” Rule
Some days, I feel overwhelmed before I even start.
Too many tasks. Too many tabs open in my brain.
So I ask:
“What’s ONE thing that would make today feel like a win?”
Just one.
Not ten. Not a perfect day. Just one.
And then I focus on that.
Weirdly, once I do that one thing, I usually end up doing more.
But even if I don’t?
Still counts.
Progress is progress—even if it’s… tiny and slightly unimpressive.
?? Inspiration Practice #6: Talk to Yourself Like You’re Not Your Enemy
This one’s uncomfortable.
Because it means noticing how you actually talk to yourself.
I caught myself the other day thinking:
“Wow, you’re being really lazy today.”
And then I paused.
Because if a friend told me they were struggling, I wouldn’t say that.
I’d say:
“Hey, maybe you’re just tired. Let’s figure it out.”
So I tried saying that to myself instead.
Felt weird. Still does.
But also… lighter.
And when your mind feels lighter, your energy follows.
?? Inspiration Practice #7: Break the “All or Nothing” Trap
This one used to ruin my entire day.
If I couldn’t do everything perfectly, I’d end up doing nothing.
Like:
“Can’t do a full workout? Guess I’ll just… sit here.”
“Can’t focus for 3 hours? Guess the day is lost.”
It’s so dramatic. And so unnecessary.
Now I try to think:
“Okay, what’s the minimum version of this?”
- 5 minutes instead of 30
- One task instead of five
- Half effort instead of zero effort
And honestly? Half effort beats zero effort every single time.
A Slightly Embarrassing Truth
Some days, my “inspiration practice” is literally:
Getting out of bed.
Drinking water.
Not spiraling.
That’s it.
And you know what?
That counts.
Because life isn’t always about peak performance. Sometimes it’s about… maintaining basic human functionality.
Which, frankly, is underrated.
?? A Few More Random Things That Help (No Real Category)
- Standing near sunlight for like 3 minutes (feels fake but works)
- Playing the same song on repeat until I feel something
- Writing down everything stressing me out just to get it out of my head
- Taking a break before I completely crash
Also—snacks. Snacks help everything.
Outbound Links You Might Actually Like
- Zen Habits (simple, calm thoughts on focus and habits)
- The Oatmeal (for when you need motivation but also want to laugh at ridiculous comics)
