A routine is a habitual sequence of actions. These are processes that individuals use to accomplish predicable aspects of life with some degree of efficiency. As routines are repeated, often daily, they can become a type of static and unimaginative behavior that cause your days to pass quickly and unimpressively. However, routines can also be pleasant, stabilizing, productive , enjoyable and inspiring such that they contribute to your quality of life. The following are common elements of a routine.
Beauty & Grooming
Breaks
Capturing Data
Caring for Pets
Checklists / To-do Lists
Cleaning
Communication
Commute
Cooking
Creative Tasks
Eating / Diet
Entertainment
Exercise
Experiments
Family Support
Family Time
Fashion
Gratitude
Greetings
Health & Wellness
Hobbies
Housework
Information Consumption
Issue Clearing
Learning
Leisure
Managing Risk
Media Consumption
Meetings
Mise en Place
Nature
Organization
Packing
Parenting
Personal Hygiene
Personal Reflection
Play
Practicing a Skill
Preparation
Prioritization Methods
Problem Solving
Productivity Time
Reading
Record Keeping
Recreation
Refine a Talent
Relaxation
Religion & Spirituality
Research
Safety Procedures
Scheduling
Screen Time
Shopping
Single Tasking
Sleep
Small Talk
Social Activities
Social Meals
Stepping Out of Comfort Zone
Studying
Tea / Coffee / Hydration
Time Boxing
Travel
Work Processes
Writing / Journals
Concrete Example
A student who has a weeknight routine of totally disconnecting when they study or work on assignments. They time box study sessions as 50 minutes with 10 minute breaks. The student can do this for many hours in a row such that they can do 1-7 hours of real work in an evening without sacrificing sleep. They adapt the routine to their current workload and often have time for leisure on weeknights.
Counterexample
A student who is random about studying such that they may focus for hours at a time or may be distracted by media, communication and video games. In some cases, they end up staying up very late and reducing the quality of their work to meet a deadline.
Continuous Improvement
Routines get repeated over and over again such that small improvements to a routine can have large benefits over time. It is possible to experiment with routines and keep what works for you. For example, some people may find that rising early has benefits for their energy and productivity while others may find that their productivity, enthusiasm and alertness are far higher after sleeping in late. Some individuals may have the flexibility to try different sleep schedules and maintain a journal of their impressions of each variation.
Breaking a Routine
Routines can include problematic behaviors or can simply become uninspiring and boring over time. As such, breaking a routine or radically changing it can sometimes spark inspiration or solve problems.
Habits vs Routines
Habits are repeated behaviors in response to situations. For example, the habit of being candid with others. Routines are habitual sequences of actions that are often associated with a time period such as a morning, day or weekend. Routines are habits but habits aren't necessarily routines.
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Routine
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