Are you 
		willing to spend a little time every day like most people won’t, so you 
		can spend the better part of your life like most people can’t?
		
		Think about 
		that question for a moment. Let it sink in. You ultimately become what 
		you repeatedly do. The acquisition of knowledge doesn’t mean you’re 
		growing—growing happens only when what you know changes how you live on 
		a daily basis (most people miss the second part).
		
		And isn’t it 
		funny how day by day nothing changes, but when you look back everything 
		is different? That’s the power of daily rituals.
		
		Now, it’s 
		time think about your rituals—the little things you do every day.
		
		Because these 
		little things define you.
		
		All the 
		results in your life come from these little things.
		
		Regardless of 
		your unique life circumstances, or how you define success, you don’t 
		suddenly become successful. You become successful over time based on 
		your rituals.
		
		Failure 
		occurs in the same way. All your little daily failures (that you don’t 
		learn and grow from) come together and cause you to fail…
		
			- 
			
			You keep 
			failing to check the books. 
- 
			
			You keep 
			failing to make the calls. 
- 
			
			You keep 
			failing to listen to your customers. 
- 
			
			You keep 
			failing to innovate. 
- 
			
			You keep 
			failing to do the little things that need to be done… 
		Then one day 
		you wake up and your business has failed. It was all the little things 
		you did or didn’t do on a daily basis—your rituals—not just one 
		inexplicable, catastrophic event.
		
		Think about 
		how this relates to your life.
		
		Your life is 
		your “business!”
		
		And your 
		rituals make or break you, gradually (that’s why rituals are a key focal 
		point of both our New York Times bestselling book and our renowned 
		course on happiness).
		
		Even the 
		seemingly insignificant rituals you engage in can produce ripples of 
		consequence, for better or worse.
		
		So, how have 
		you been managing your rituals, and thus your life?
		
		Are the 
		little things you’re doing every day working for you or against you? If 
		you think the answer might be the latter, you will find incredible value 
		in the tiny daily rituals listed below. Each of them gradually 
		strengthens common weak points we’ve seen plaguing hundreds of our 
		course students, coaching clients, and live event attendees over the 
		past decade—little things people do every day that stress them out and 
		prevent them from moving forward with their lives.
		
		And remember, 
		this article is about making tiny, sustainable changes in your routine 
		behavior. That means practicing each one of these rituals gradually—one 
		at a time, one day at a time, and then letting them build on one 
		another. Go from zero to six over the course of six months, or maybe 
		less, but certainly not all at once.
		
		1. The ritual 
		of simply doing one thing, and only one thing, at a time.
		
		Be honest…
		
			- 
			
			Do you 
			check social media apps on your phone when you’re sitting in 
			meetings, or when you’re spending time with family and friends? 
- 
			
			Do you 
			eat lunch at your desk, or while you’re on the run? 
- 
			
			Is the TV 
			often on in your home, even when you’re busy doing other things? 
- 
			
			Do you 
			send the occasional text message while driving? 
		The biggest 
		cost of doing multiple things at once like this (assuming you don’t 
		crash from the occasional texting and driving) is a gradual decline in 
		your productivity and happiness over the long-term. When you get in the 
		habit of persistently dividing your attention, you’re partially engaged 
		in every activity, but rarely focused on any one. And this dizzying lack 
		of focus eventually trips you up and brings you down to your knees.
		
		Let’s use a 
		quick metaphor to bring this point home:
		
		If you hold a 
		magnifying glass over a small pile of dry leaves as the sun shines 
		bright on the hottest afternoon of the whole year, NOTHING will happen…
		
		…so long as 
		you keep moving the magnifying glass quickly from one leaf to the next.
		
		But as soon 
		as you hold the magnifying glass still and FOCUS the sun’s rays on one 
		single leaf, the whole pile of leaves will ignite into flames.
		
		The power of 
		focusing on one thing at a time.
		Your opportunity on a daily basis is to realize that you are the 
		magnifying glass in your own life, and that you can intentionally focus 
		the energy you get from the world on one single leaf at a time. When you 
		do so, you will ignite incredible “flames” that move your projects, your 
		dreams, your relationships, and even the world around you, forward.
		
		2. The ritual 
		of washing your dishes.
		
		Yes, I 
		literally mean washing your dishes. It’s just one small step forward: 
		When you eat your oatmeal, wash your bowl and spoon. When you finish 
		drinking your morning coffee, rinse the coffee pot and your mug. Don’t 
		leave any dirty dishes in the sink or on the counter for later. Wash 
		them immediately.
		
		Form this 
		small ritual one dish at a time, one day at a time. Once you do this 
		consistently for a couple weeks, you can start making sure the sink has 
		been wiped clean too. Then the counter. Then put your clothes where they 
		belong when you take them off. Then start doing a few sit-ups every 
		morning. Eat a few vegetables for dinner. And so forth.
		
		Do one of 
		these at a time, and you’ll start to build a healthy ritual of 
		practicing self-discipline, and finally know yourself to be capable of 
		doing the little things that must be done… and finishing what you start.
		
		But again, to 
		start, just wash your dishes. Mindfully, with a smile.
		
		3. The ritual 
		of journaling (for fifteen minutes or less).
		
		J.K. Rowling 
		keeps a journal. Eminem keeps a journal. Oprah keeps a journal. 
		Successful people all over the world—those who consistently make 
		positive changes in their lives—reflect daily and learn from their life 
		experiences. And they often use some kind of journal to accomplish this.
		
		If you want 
		to get somewhere in life, you need a map, and your journal is that map. 
		You can write down what you did today, what you tried to accomplish, 
		where you made mistakes, and so much more. It’s a place to reflect. It’s 
		a place to capture important thoughts. It’s a place to sort out where 
		you’ve been and where you intend to go. And it’s one of the most 
		underused, yet incredibly effective tools available to the masses.
		
		Just this 
		morning, I spent fifteen minutes journaling about some recent events in 
		my life that I’m grateful for, and some that are still troubling me. As 
		I was wrapping up, the idea for the blog post you’re reading now came to 
		me, which was a pleasant surprise since I hadn’t yet decided what I was 
		going to share with you today.
		
		I also 
		unearthed some incredibly healthy insights regarding an important 
		relationship that I had been neglecting, which motivated me to 
		immediately send out a text message to someone I care about who I’ve 
		been meaning to reconnect with for far too long. We now have a brunch 
		date scheduled for next Sunday.
		
		So, as you 
		can infer, your time spent focusing inward and journaling doesn’t just 
		help you—your mind is powerful and your thoughts create ripples in the 
		world around you. When you bring clarity into your life, you bring the 
		best of yourself into everything you do—you tend to treat yourself and 
		others better, communicate more constructively, do things for the right 
		reasons, and ultimately improve the world you’re living in. This is why 
		journaling for a short time every day can actually make a significant 
		real-world difference in your life.
		
		4. The ritual 
		of bringing awareness to your attachments.
		
		Most of the 
		things we desperately try to hold on to, as if they’re real, solid, 
		everlasting fixtures in our lives, aren’t really there. Or if they are 
		there in some form, they’re changing, fluid, impermanent, or simply 
		imagined in our minds.
		
		Life gets a 
		lot easier to deal with when we understand this.
		
		Imagine 
		you’re blindfolded and treading water in the center of a large swimming 
		pool, and you’re struggling desperately to grab the edge of the pool 
		that you think is nearby, but in reality it’s not—it’s far away. Trying 
		to grab that imaginary edge is stressing you out, and tiring you out, as 
		you splash around aimlessly trying to holding on to something that isn’t 
		there.
		
		Now imagine 
		you pause, take a deep breath, and realize that there’s nothing nearby 
		to hold on to. Just water around you. You can continue to struggle with 
		grabbing at something that doesn’t exist… or you can accept that there’s 
		only water around you, and relax, and float.
		
		On a daily 
		basis, I challenge you to consciously ask yourself:
		
		
		Then imagine 
		the thing you’re trying to hold on to doesn’t really exist.
		
		Envision 
		yourself letting go… and just floating.
		
		(Note: Angel 
		and I guide our readers through this process in the “Letting Go” chapter 
		of our NYT bestselling book.)
		
		5. The ritual 
		of allowing most things to be the way they are.
		
		Some things 
		in life are worth changing. Most things are not.
		
		Let that sink 
		in for a moment.
		
		“If you want 
		to control the animals, give them a larger pasture.” That’s a quote 
		Angel and I heard at a meditation retreat several years ago in a group 
		discussion focused on the power of changing your attitude about the 
		things you can’t change or don’t need to change.
		
		I see “the 
		animals” and their “larger pasture” as a form of letting go and allowing 
		things to be the way they are. Instead of trying to tightly control 
		something, you’re loosening up, giving it more space—a larger pasture. 
		The animals will be happier; they will roam around and do what they 
		naturally do. And your needs will be met too; you will have more space 
		to be at peace with the way the animals are.
		
		This same 
		philosophy holds true for many aspects of life—stepping back and 
		allowing certain things to happen means these things will take care of 
		themselves, and your needs will also be met. You will have less stress 
		(and less to do), and more time and energy to work on the things that 
		truly matter, and the things you actually can control—like your attitude 
		about everything.
		
		This form of 
		letting go is not giving up. It’s about surrendering any obsessive 
		attachment to particular people, outcomes and situations. It means 
		showing up every day in your life with the intention to be your best 
		self, and to do the best you know how, without expecting life to go a 
		certain way.
		
		The energy of 
		someone aspiring to create something wonderful, teamed with this kind of 
		surrender, is far more powerful and rewarding than someone determined to 
		create outcomes with a desperate “must have” mentality. Surrender brings 
		inner peace and joy, and lest we forget that our outer lives are a 
		reflection of our inner state of being.
		
		6. The ritual 
		of giving thanks before bed.
		
		Overlooking 
		everything that’s wonderful is a tragedy—a very debilitating one. When 
		you get lost in worried thoughts about a life situation you think you 
		“should” have, you end up missing the beauty of everything you do have. 
		And you will never be happy if you aren’t consciously thankful for the 
		good things in your life.
		
		Here’s a 
		super simple, five-minute daily gratitude exercise that has worked 
		wonders for hundreds of our course students and coaching clients over 
		the past decade:
		
		Every evening 
		before you go to bed, write down three things that went well during the 
		day and their causes. Simply provide a short, causal explanation for 
		each good thing.
		
		That’s it. We 
		spend tens of thousands of dollars on expensive electronics, big homes, 
		fancy cars and lavish vacations hoping for a boost of happiness. This is 
		a free alternative, and it works.
		
		In a study of 
		this gratitude exercise’s effectiveness by the famed psychologist Martin 
		Seligman, participants were asked to follow those exact instructions for 
		just one week. After one week the participants were measurably 2% 
		happier than before, but in follow-up tests their happiness kept on 
		increasing, from 5% at one month, to 9% at six months. Even more 
		interestingly, the participants were only required to keep this 
		gratitude journal for one week, but the majority of them continued 
		journaling on their own because they enjoyed it.
		
		I tried it 
		for myself many years ago—I set a goal of doing it for just one week, 
		and I’m still doing it today. So, I can assure you it’s effective.
		
		
		Afterthoughts… On Trusting Yourself Again
		
		Renewing your 
		trust in yourself is imperative, which is one of the most significant 
		hidden benefits of practicing the aforementioned daily rituals. In fact, 
		what Angel and I lacked before we learned to implement these kinds of 
		daily rituals was the trust that we were actually capable of achieving 
		positive results in our lives. We had failed so many times in the past, 
		and had grown so discouraged in ourselves, that we started 
		subconsciously choosing procrastination over future attempts to fulfill 
		the promises we made to ourselves.
		
		In essence, 
		we lost trust in both our abilities and ourselves. It’s kind of like 
		another person constantly lying to you—eventually you stop trusting 
		them. The same holds true with the promises you make to yourself that 
		always end in disappointment. Eventually, you stop trusting yourself.
		
		And the 
		solution in most cases is the same too: you have to renew your trust 
		gradually, with small promises, small steps (your daily rituals), and 
		small victories. Of course, this process takes time, but it happens 
		relatively fast if you stick to it. And it’s arguably one of the most 
		important, life-changing things you can do for yourself.
		
		(Reminder: 
		Angel and I build and customize tiny, life-changing daily rituals with 
		our students in the “Goals & Growth” module of the Getting Back to Happy 
		course.)
		
		Your turn…
		
		If you’re 
		feeling up to it, we would love to hear from YOU.
		
		Which ritual 
		discussed above resonates with you the most today?