An introduction into an Architect’s morning

Now, it is my turn to show you my morning routine. I begin with its development but will end with the connection to productivity and the Zettelkasten Method. So, hang on!

First, my morning routine expanded over weeks and then collapsed markedly to a pretty short compilation of actions I identified as having the most bang for the buck.

A month or two ago my morning routine looked like this:

Brushing teeth
Drinking lime juice with some himalayan salt
Meditation for 10–20 minutes
Sun Salutation
Three pages of free writing (stream of consciousness)
Now, I only do this:

Brushing teeth
Drinking lime juice with some himalayan salt
Meditation for 10-20 minutes
Sun Salutation
It seems like a rather small difference but the three pages of writing is another 20 minutes that I now consider not only as wasted but even as counter productive.

The three pages of free writing put my mind in a clumsy state. I learned from my meditation practice that I have more than one state of concentration. I need a different state of mind for my morning work than in the afternoon.

Both of these times, I work heavily. However, in the morning, I schedule most of my creative tasks. I do what I call re-writing research. That means that I produce as I learn something new. To me, that puts a high demand of flexibility and fluidity on my mind. I can’t just concentrate on learning, and I am not able to just write non-stop to create a shitty first draft. But I don’t multitask and I don’t switch gears. It is rather a fluid but spontaneous flow of actions.

At that time of day, I build new models in my mind. The building blocks of those models are fixed in Zettel notes.

In the afternoon, in contrast, I switch to another state of mind: from fluid to mechanical. I do all of the online consulting and organizational tasks.

Besides my non-knowledge-related work, I still work. I form notes from my inbox and put in every idea I obtain (through thinking or reading) in my archive. But these are more isolated actions.

Why did I ditch the morning pages?

They put me in a mechanical state of mind. I have an idea why this is so. Perhaps, it’s putting me into that state because sometimes I don’t really know what to write and force myself to get yet another topic to finish the three pages. Perhaps there are other reasons. The bottom line is: At the end of the routine, I am in a mechanical state of mind.

After I adopted the habit of writing morning pages, the quality of my morning work suffered. I never had writer’s block. I don’t need to train myself to make writing a habit. I already made reflection and reasoning corner stones of my life. Thus, I don’t need any ritual to automates that.

I ditched the morning pages, and my creative work in the morning improved. I had more time and felt more flexible because of my shorter morning routine.

I already hinted at the connection to the Zettelkasten Method and my productivity.

You should schedule the tasks which are most important and put the most creative demand in your morning hours. Here, you are fresh and your mind is unpolluted. Your morning routine should have the same effect as your warm-up routine has before a workout. It should free you up and prepare you in the right manner.

If you do swimming you should loosen up your shoulder girth. But if you do bench pressing you need some rigidity and stiffness in your shoulder. To much of a mobilization could harm your bench press.

The same thing holds true for your morning routine. It should leave you in the right mood. Rigidity is not right for my morning work. I don’t argue in favor or against free writing in the morning. I just want you to reflect on the actions you do in the morning and analyze every aspect of it.

There are different possibilities how you can work with your Zettelkasten. I mentioned two:

The fluid mode, which is predominantly used for developing new thoughts and ideas.
The rigid mode, which is predominantly used for just creating notes for later use.
The latter is not very interesting.2 It is just about putting notes into your archive. But the former is developed by deliberate and daily practice. It gives me the opportunity to develop more complex ideas because I can use my Zettelkasten as a thinking abacus.