Ever notice what you do when you wake up?
Alarm screams
โ you slap snooze (3x, no judgment ๐
)
โ reach for your phone
โ fall into the doom scroll spiral of Insta, TikTok, or whatever appโs got you hooked.
And before you even get outta bed . . . you already wasted 30 minutes, feeling guilty and awful about doom scrolling.
Sound familiar?
Yeah. Thatโs your brain on autopilot, and itโs wired that way on purpose.
You see, our brain loves habits!!
Like, biologically loves them.
Every time you repeat a behavior, whether itโs scrolling mindlessly or doing jumping jacks, your neurons fire together. And as neuroscientists love to say:
โNeurons that fire together, wire together.โ
Thatโs Hebbโs Law at play! ๐ง โจ
SoOoo, if your first move every morning is grabbing your phone and zoning out . . . guess what?
Youโre reinforcing a neural pathway that says:
โMorning = distraction, stress, delays.โ
But if your first move is movement, even just nine minutes . . . you start wiring a new default:
โMorning = energy, clarity, control.โ
Enter the 3x3 Morning Routine:
3 minutes + 3 moves = 9 minutes total
It sounds laughably small, especially if youโve seen those โ45-minute HIIT challengesโ or โone-hour yoga flowsโ flooding your feed.
They make us feel like we have to do more than 20-minutes daily workout to get results
But hereโs the kicker: "tiny actions are more powerful than big ones when youโre building consistency."
Why?
Because your brain resists big changes.
Itโs wired for efficiency (aka laziness).
But a 3-minute commitment?
Thatโs so tiny your brain just canโt say no.
And once you start?
Youโve already won.
Because action precedes motivation, not the other way around.
You donโt feel like moving, so you start moving, and then you feel like continuing.
Itโs called the Zeigarnik Effect: "your brain likes to finish what it starts."
So even if you planned to stop at 9 minutes, you might keep going.
For me?
I begin my mornings with 30 seconds of deep breathing and a moment of gratitude (hello, vagus nerve activation ๐).
Then I rotate through three moves, maybe lunges, squats, and weighted ropeless jumping.
Some days I add a fascia twist (still learning how connective tissue affects mood and mobility!), other days I just keep it simple, and at least once a week I dance for about 20 minutes just coz I love dancing!!
And after 9 minutes, you wouldn't need coffee.
Why?
Because movement spikes norepinephrine and dopamine, your brainโs natural alertness and feel-good chemicals.
No caffeine required.
After two weeks of doing the 3x3 every morning?
Little shifts show up in your life . . .
- โก Energy thatโs steady, not frantic
- ๐ฏ Focus that kicks in the moment you open your laptop
- ๐ฅฐ Mood thatโs lighter, like youโve already checked a win off your list
- ๐ Consistency that feels easy, because the bar is intentionally low
And remember: consistency isnโt about willpower, itโs about wiring.
Every time you do your 3x3, youโre deepening that โIโve got thisโ groove in your brain.
Soon, skipping it feels weirder than doing it.
So hereโs your science-backed morning action plan:
- Tonight: Set your alarm 10 minutes earlier (yup, just 10).
- Tomorrow morning: Before you touch your phone, set a 3-minute timer. (TIP: don't sleep with your cell phone near you, instead, get a smart alarm)
- Pick 3 simple moves: jumping jacks, squats, lunges, push-ups, sun salutations . . . whatever your vibe!!
- Do 3 minutes per move. Thatโs it. No tracking, no pressure.
- Celebrate: Say out loud, โI did it!!โ (This activates your reward circuitry)
Bottom line:
You donโt need to overhaul your life.
You just need to rewire your first 9 minutes.
Because how you start your day shapes your brainโs expectations for the next 15 hours.
Three moves.
Three minutes each.
And you'll probably do it longer than 9 minutes!!
Just Do it and you'll feel alive before your day hijacks you.
Try it.
What have you got to lose . . . besides doom-scrolling guilt? ๐