Pillar number 2, the early bird gets the worm.
Speaker:Now, if you're a morning person like me, you know there's nothing quite like
Speaker:the peace and calm of the early morning hours. You get
Speaker:up, nobody else is awake. Every everything is
Speaker:quiet. You might have some of the early actual birds
Speaker:just starting to wake up, but you can get your cup of coffee
Speaker:and sit there in silence for a while. It's just
Speaker:something about a good way to start the
Speaker:morning and a lot of the most successful
Speaker:entrepreneurs do just that. They get up early even
Speaker:much earlier than I do. Early morning hours are some of the best
Speaker:hours to tackle the most important tasks of the day. Getting up
Speaker:early allows you to accomplish big
Speaker:things before most of the rest of the world has even woken up. Then
Speaker:you've you're already so much farther ahead when you can do that.
Speaker:It's, instead of mind over matter,
Speaker:call it mind over mattress. That thinking has been around for quite a
Speaker:while. Even, Benjamin Franklin came up with a quote. He
Speaker:said, early to bed, early to rise makes a man healthy,
Speaker:wealthy, and wise. A lot of
Speaker:very successful entrepreneurs are early risers. You've
Speaker:got Tim Cook, said he gets up as early as 3:45
Speaker:AM. That's Apple CEO. You've got CEO of
Speaker:Kohl's, Michelle Gas, 4:30 AM to go running. You
Speaker:have, former PepsiCo CEO, Indra I'm not
Speaker:sure how to say that. She's up at 4 AM in
Speaker:Indra Nooyi. I'm not sure. Maybe. I
Speaker:butchered that. Gets up at 4 AM in the office at 7.
Speaker:Twitter cofounder Jack Dorsey up at 5:30. Meditation,
Speaker:go for a jog. Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz up at
Speaker:4 AM. These people are all uber successful.
Speaker:And then you have Richard Branson as well. He's the entrepreneur
Speaker:behind the Virgin Group of Companies. He's up at
Speaker:5:45 AM. That's not super early, but it is early. It's earlier
Speaker:than most of the world rises. And
Speaker:if if you can incorporate that type of thinking,
Speaker:not just into your mornings, but into
Speaker:being early to whatever it is you're doing, being
Speaker:the first mover on whatever venture that you're that
Speaker:you're getting into, being early into
Speaker:the party that will get you so much farther ahead in
Speaker:life. You look at people that are always late. Let's just take
Speaker:Bitcoin for example. I don't know if you're into Bitcoin or not. I've been
Speaker:in and out of it and it's, I
Speaker:enjoy, I enjoy it and I know what it is and and
Speaker:the power and the capability that Bitcoin has to transform the way that we
Speaker:do money. But if you were early into Bitcoin
Speaker:way back years ago, you could
Speaker:have bought many Bitcoin
Speaker:for a dollar. Like it was a couple cents per bitcoin. Now
Speaker:it's up around 70,000 per bitcoin. So say if you had put
Speaker:a $100 into it 20 years ago, which
Speaker:it hasn't even been 20 years ago, 15 years ago,
Speaker:you would be a multi multi multi millionaire right now
Speaker:if you were early to that. I'm not everything does that. Not
Speaker:everything is gonna explode like that, but if you can be early
Speaker:on some of those technologies, you
Speaker:you'll be so much farther ahead and that's that's just
Speaker:with anything in life. If you're early, is better than
Speaker:late. So what does the science say about this?
Speaker:Maybe. Maybe the old sayings are true. Maybe early
Speaker:risers actually do live happier, healthier lives and
Speaker:more productive. Here's what some researchers have to say about
Speaker:it. In 2014, the Department of Psychology at Binghamton
Speaker:University completed a study that included 100 undergraduate
Speaker:students. Their study found that both people who get less
Speaker:sleep and those who delay sleep are prone to
Speaker:repetitive negative thinking. So people who
Speaker:don't sleep as much and people who go to bed later.
Speaker:RNT or repetitive negative thinking is a transdiagnostic
Speaker:disorder that can be observed in other disorders such as depression and
Speaker:anxiety. It's correlated with high levels of worry
Speaker:and negative thought patterns. Early
Speaker:risers increase their chance of success
Speaker:because you don't have as high likelihood of getting
Speaker:into those negative thought patterns. In 2010, Harvard
Speaker:Business Review released a study by biologist Christophe
Speaker:Randler about early risers. 367 university
Speaker:students participated in this survey. They were asked what times of the day they
Speaker:were most energetic. They were also asked how willing and able they were to take
Speaker:action or change a situation to their advantage. He reported,
Speaker:a higher percentage of the morning people agree with statements that indicate
Speaker:proactivity such as, I spend time identifying long range goals for
Speaker:myself and I feel in charge of making things happen. He went on
Speaker:to say that, My research showed that they tend to get
Speaker:better grades in school, which get them into better colleges,
Speaker:which lead to better opportunities. Morning people also
Speaker:anticipate problems and try to minimize them. They're proactive.
Speaker:A number of studies have linked this trait, proactivity, with better job
Speaker:performance, greater career success, and higher wages. Now,
Speaker:I don't know about you, but that sounds like a good reason to
Speaker:incorporate the the early to bad, early to rise
Speaker:or or to be an the early bird gets the worm principle.
Speaker:That's that's a great way to incorporate that or a good reason to.
Speaker:Here's 7 things that you can do to help you out in this
Speaker:area. Number 1, go to bed early. Of course. Number
Speaker:2, turn off your screens. Those
Speaker:screens, they have a blue light that suppresses melatonin, which
Speaker:helps you sleep better. K. Number 3,
Speaker:create a sleep routine. Try to go to bed at a consistent
Speaker:hour and wake up at a consistent hour. That helps
Speaker:you out so much. Number 4 is get some exercise.
Speaker:I just started doing 75 hard and I've been doing a
Speaker:lot more exercise than I normally do. Now
Speaker:I work a very the work that I do is very active
Speaker:and it's hard work. So it's almost like exercise, but it's not
Speaker:specifically exercise. In 75 hard, I've been
Speaker:doing 2 45 minute exercise slash workout
Speaker:slash stretches per day, and it it's
Speaker:changed how I feel. Number 5. This is one thing that you can do
Speaker:if you have a hard time getting out of bed is keeping your alarm
Speaker:clock at a distance. Like put it across the room.
Speaker:If you tend to hit the snooze button, put your alarm clock across the
Speaker:room and you'll want to get up and go turn it off.
Speaker:Number 6, a splash of cold water on the face like that
Speaker:will help you wake up. Get some cold water. Wash your face
Speaker:down. It's just refreshing, rejuvenating. And
Speaker:number 7, the best one of all, give yourself a reason to
Speaker:get up. Thinking of a compelling reason to get out of bed in the
Speaker:morning is possibly the strongest motivator for early
Speaker:rising. You want to accomplish great things. You want to do things
Speaker:to better your situation, to better your life, your health, your career, your
Speaker:family, your relationships, all of those things. That will
Speaker:get you moving more than anything.
Speaker:Do good work.