Introduction
Routines are often sold as productivity hacks—ways to get more done, faster.
But if you’re in a season of reinvention, your routine isn’t just about efficiency.
It’s about alignment.
The systems that worked for your old life may not fit the person you’re becoming.
This post is about how to design routines that feel supportive, not suffocating—and that move you closer to the life you actually want.
Step 1: Audit Your Current Routines
Before you can design something new, you need to see what’s already running on autopilot.
Make a list of your daily, weekly, and monthly patterns:
How you start your mornings
How you end your workdays
How you spend evenings and weekends
What you prioritize without thinking
Ask yourself:
Which routines feel life-giving?
Which feel obligatory?
Which are relics of an identity I’ve outgrown?
This clarity helps you decide what stays.
Step 2: Name Who You’re Becoming
Routines are most effective when they’re anchored to identity, not just goals.
Examples:
“I’m becoming a person who prioritizes health over hustle.”
“I’m becoming a creative who finishes what they start.”
“I’m becoming someone who protects their peace.”
Write a sentence that defines your next chapter. This will guide every choice you make.
Step 3: Define the Feeling You Want Your Days to Have
We often design routines to optimize output—but overlook how they make us feel.
Ask:
Do I want my days to feel calm or energizing?
Do I crave structure or spaciousness?
Where do I need more ease, and where do I need more discipline?
Your routines should create the atmosphere that supports your best work and your well-being.
Step 4: Keep What Works, Release What Doesn’t
Not everything needs to change.
Identify:
Routines worth keeping (they still align)
Routines to tweak (small adjustments bring them into alignment)
Routines to retire (they belong to another season)
This prevents reinvention from turning into unnecessary chaos.
Step 5: Layer in Supportive Micro-Habits
You don’t have to overhaul everything at once.
Start with micro-habits:
5 minutes of planning each morning
A weekly check-in to review goals
A midday break to reset your energy
A nightly shutdown ritual to signal work is done
Small changes compound over time.
Step 6: Protect Time for What Matters Most
New routines require boundaries.
Decide:
When you’re available—and when you’re not
What commitments you’re willing to decline
Which distractions you’ll actively remove
Time you protect becomes the container for the person you’re becoming.
Step 7: Create Visual Reminders
Your environment influences your follow-through.
Examples:
A printed version of your new routine
A whiteboard tracking your habits
A phone wallpaper with your guiding identity statement
Visual cues reduce decision fatigue and keep you focused.
Step 8: Revisit and Refine
No routine is final.
Schedule monthly or quarterly reviews:
What’s working?
What’s frictional?
What needs to evolve as I grow?
Your routines should be living systems—not rigid rules.
Final Thought
Routines aren’t just about discipline. They’re about design.
When you create rhythms that support who you’re becoming, you make it easier to step into that identity every day.
Edit your systems as often as you edit your goals. That’s how you build a life that feels congruent and true.
— Sloane MacRae



