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April 8, 2025 6 mins
Learn how the first moments after waking can set the tone for your entire day. Olivia reveals simple practices that can create a foundation of calm and intention, even on your busiest mornings.

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Ah Calirogashock Media. Hi everyone, I'm Olivia and welcome to
today's five Minutes of Gratitude. I've been thinking about mornings lately,
specifically those first few minutes after waking. There's something special

(00:21):
about this threshold time between sleep and full wakefulness. I've
discovered that how we spend these moments can influence our
entire day, even if we only have five minutes to spare.
Last month, I found myself in a pattern I didn't like.
I was reaching for my phone the instant I woke up, immediately,
diving into news, emails, and social media before my feet

(00:43):
even hit the floor. I noticed I was starting my
days feeling scattered and reactive, rather than centered and intentional.
So I tried an experiment. I decided to protect just
the first five minutes of my day, to keep them
completely free of inputs from the outside world. No phone,
no news, no demands, just five minutes to set the

(01:05):
tone for what was to come. The difference this small
change made in how my days unfolded truly surprised me.
Now I know mornings can be chaotic if you have
young children, demanding work schedules or other responsibilities that hit
the moment you wake up. Even five protected minutes might
sound impossible, but I've found that if we can carve

(01:27):
out even a tiny sliver of time, sometimes just two
or three minutes, it can serve as an anchor for
the day ahead. The beauty of these first moments is
that they don't need to involve anything complicated. Some mornings,
I simply lie in bed and feel my breath for
a few minutes. Other days I might stretch gently or

(01:49):
look out the window at the changing morning sky. The
specific activity matters less than the fact that I'm beginning
on my own terms, not in reaction to external demands.
I've noticed that these first moments offer a chance to
set an intention for the day, not a to do
list or a goal, but a quality I want to
bring to whatever unfolds, perhaps patience or creativity or presence.

(02:13):
Just naming this intention creates a subtle shift in how
I approach whatever comes next. My neighbor Eduardo, who has
three kids and an early commute, told me he gets
up just five minutes before everyone else in his household.
He sits at his kitchen table with a cup of coffee,
looking out at his backyard in the early light. Those

(02:35):
five minutes, he says, are when I remember who I
am before I become dad and employee for the day.
Even the simplest sensory experiences can be powerful during these
early minutes. Feeling the warmth of your covers, listening to
birds outside your window, noticing the taste of that first
sip of water or coffee. Our senses provide direct pathways

(02:59):
to pre presence that are available to us regardless of
our circumstances. One morning practice that's been especially meaningful involves
taking those first few minutes to notice what I'm grateful

(03:20):
for before any of the day's challenges or tasks have begun.
Sometimes it's as simple as appreciation for a good night's sleep,
or the comfort of my bed, or the fact that
I'm alive for another day. Beginning with gratitude, even briefly
sets a different foundation for whatever follows. I've discovered that
these first minutes also offer a chance for a different

(03:43):
kind of planning, not the detailed scheduling we do later,
but a moment to ask what matters most today. Often,
the answer that comes when I'm still in that threshold
state is different from what my busy mind would prioritize
once the day gets going. It's like having access to
a deeper wisdom before the noise takes over. The Quality

(04:05):
of our attention during these first moments seems particularly important.
My friend Sarah describes it as setting the aperture for
the day. If we begin with scattered, fragmented attention, that
pattern tends to continue. But when we start with a
few minutes of present, undivided awareness, it creates a reference

(04:25):
point we can return to throughout the day. One of
the simplest morning practices involves connecting with your body before
engaging your mind. Even just noticing the sensation of your
feet on the floor when you first get out of
bed can bring you immediately into the present moment. This
body awareness creates a natural bridge between the dream world

(04:47):
of sleep and the practical world of daily activities. If
you're someone who struggles with morning anxiety, these first minutes
can be especially important. Rather than immediately engaging with whatever
worries are waiting, taking even two minutes to focus on
your breath or to move gently can interrupt the anxiety
cycle before it gains momentum. It's like creating a small

(05:12):
buffer zone between sleep and the day's concerns. I found
that what we don't do in those first minutes is
just as important as what we do. By simply delaying
my engagement with news, social media, and emails for five minutes,
I changed my relationship with these inputs. They became something
I chose to engage with intentionally, rather than something that

(05:35):
captured my attention before I was fully awake. The morning
light itself offers a beautiful focus for those first minutes.
The quality of dawn light is unique, softer, and more
gradual than any other time of day. Taking a moment
to notice how it filters through your curtains or changes
the color of your walls connects you to the natural

(05:56):
rhythm of the day that's beginning, regardless of your schedule.
Today's affirmation is how I begin matters. Take a breath
and feel the truth of that. The way we start,
whether it's a day, a conversation, or a project, creates
a foundation for everything that follows. Thank you for spending

(06:19):
part of your day with me. Until next time. May
your mornings offer moments of peace and presence. This is
Olivia signing off from five minutes of gratitude
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