The First Attempt at a Routine (And Why It Failed)

I still remember that morning vividly — the one I convinced myself would change everything.

I set my alarm for 5 a.m., a fresh, buzzing hope coursing through me. “This time, I’m doing it right,” I thought. The house was still dark and quiet. I tiptoed downstairs, brewed my coffee, laid out my planner, and envisioned a smooth, productive day unfolding.

Except… it didn’t.

By 7 a.m., chaos had quietly crept back in.

My kids were up — hungry, restless, and definitely not on my “perfect” schedule. The school uniforms I thought I’d set out the night before were nowhere to be found. I was scrambling to find missing shoes, making breakfasts that everyone refused to eat, and trying to keep my phone from ringing off the hook.

Instead of the calm, early-morning zen I’d imagined, I was frazzled and exhausted before the day had even begun.

I thought I could flip a switch and instantly become a morning person who’s calm, organised, and productive. Spoiler: I’m not a robot. Habits take time and patience.

I tried to overhaul my entire day all at once instead of starting small.

I was so focused on “fixing” my morning that I forgot my kids needed routines, too. Without clear expectations or a consistent schedule for them, mornings became a tug-of-war between my plan and their needs.

I wasn’t truly ready to wake up early. I was still going to bed late, running on low sleep and high caffeine. So forcing myself out of bed early just made me more tired and irritable.

After a particularly exhausting week, I sat down and wrote myself a brutally honest note:

“This isn’t working. I’m burned out, not building habits. And my kids need me to be present — not perfect.”

I realised that routines aren’t about being rigid or “doing it right” immediately. They’re about small, consistent steps that work for my life, not someone else’s Instagram feed.


I began experimenting:

  • Waking up 15 minutes earlier — not an hour
  • Setting simple, flexible morning goals like “drink water” and “get dressed”
  • Creating a visual routine chart for my kids with stickers for each task
  • Moving bedtime earlier (when possible) so mornings felt less brutal
  • Planning breakfast options the night before

I even learned to forgive myself on days when nothing went according to plan. That grace kept me coming back instead of giving up.

Routines aren’t a one-size-fits-all magic wand. They require trial, error, and adjustment.

You’re learning what fits your family, your work, your energy — and that’s a process. Some days will be wins. Others, a mess. That’s life.

The key is to start small, track what works, and build from there.

✅ Ready to Take Action?

Download the FREE Morning Energy Audit Worksheet — a 2-page guide to:

  • Track what drains your energy each morning
  • Identify moments that fuel your focus and calm
  • Reflect on your family’s morning habits
  • Plan baby-step improvements that stick
  • Include space for your personal energy highs and lows

grab this now!

Morning Energy Audit Worksheet

“Routines don’t have to be perfect — they just have to be yours.”

The Balanced Wealth Studio

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