I am not quite a morning person. I wake up early because I have to. For work, for activities, for meetings. And the most transformative practice I have found happens before those. Here is the honest version of how I got there.
Let me be clear from the start: I did not cure my night-owl tendencies with discipline or cold showers or a sunrise alarm that plays whale sounds.
What I did do was find fifteen minutes, before the day had demands, before the notifications started, before I had to be anyone for anyone, and I started breathing deliberately in them.
Breathwork has been practised across cultures for thousands of years. The modern wellness industry has repackaged it into something that can feel either clinical or performative. What nobody tells you is that at its simplest, it requires nothing except a willingness to pay attention.
“You are not trying to become a different kind of person. You are just finding a gap in the noise.”
The practice I started with was basic: four counts in through the nose, hold for four, out for four, hold for four. Box breathing. Used by everyone from surgeons to Special Forces units to reduce acute stress response. No app required. No mat. No explanation owed to anyone.
What surprised me was not the calm, I expected that, in theory. What surprised me was the clarity. After two weeks of consistent practice, I noticed I was less reactive in the first hour of my day. Not because I had transformed. Because I had given my nervous system a landing pad before the day started.
If 6am sounds impossible, try 10pm. Try the ten minutes before you check your phone in the morning. The exact timing matters less than the consistency. You are not trying to become the kind of person who does breathwork at dawn. You are just trying to find a gap in the noise and use it.
That is enough. That counts.


