đ The Habit My Old Self Would Never Believe
How the most unexpected routine became the one thing I canât imagine my life without

If someone had told the old me â the version who lived on autopilot, who avoided change like it was a contagious illness, who clung to comfort zones like they were lifelines â that one day Iâd be the kind of person who woke up before sunrise on purpose, I wouldâve laughed so hard Iâd choke on my own disbelief.
But here I am, years later, waking up at 5:20 a.m. every morning without an alarm. Not because I have to, not because Iâm trapped in some productivity cult, and definitely not because someone convinced me early mornings are the âsecret to success.â I do it because⌠well, something inside me changed. Shifted. Pulled me forward.
And this unrecognizable part of my routine? The old me would stare at it like it was a glitch in the universe.
So if youâre ready for the full story â the before, the after, and the wildly unlikely middle â let me take you back.
â The Old Me: Proud Night Owl, Eternal Snoozer
I used to be the type of person who believed mornings were a myth invented by overachievers. My brightest hours were late at night. Midnight creativity. 2 a.m. conversations. 3 a.m. epiphanies followed by promises to âfix my schedule starting tomorrow.â
Spoiler: tomorrow never showed up.
My morning routine back then was simple
⢠wake up late
⢠panic
⢠scramble like the building was on fire
⢠skip breakfast
⢠arrive everywhere with apologies and caffeine guilt
Family teased me about it. Friends used to send memes joking about my inability to wake up before noon without violent spiritual intervention. And truthfully, I embraced the identity. It was who I was.
Or at least, who I thought I had to be.
đ The First Shift
The shift didnât come with fireworks or a cinematic montage. It came quietly. Softly. Like a whisper.
It was a winter morning when everything felt too loud and too heavy. Iâd slept badly, scrolled too much, thought too much, and accomplished nothing. My brain fog was so dense I couldâve walked into a parked car.
Without thinking, I got up earlier than usual â 8 a.m., which felt illegal â and just⌠stepped outside.
The sky wasnât bright. The air wasnât warm. The world wasnât poetic. But something was different. For the first time in a long time, the silence didnât feel empty. It felt clean. Like someone had wiped the edges of the day before it began smudging.
I donât know why that moment stayed with me. Maybe because it felt like a window cracked open in a house Iâd forgotten had windows at all.
Whatever the reason, the next day I got up at 7:45. Then 7:20. Then 7. And slowly, almost accidentally, mornings became a thing I sought instead of something I escaped.
But the 5:20 a.m. version? That came later.
And oh, that transformation had teeth.
đĄ The Middle: A Strange, Gentle Rebellion
Thereâs something shocking about realizing your routines are cages. That your habits are older versions of you clinging to your ankles. That life quietly nudges you toward growth, and all you have to do is stop resisting long enough to notice.
The early mornings turned into something more than schedule tweaking. They became rebellion in slow motion.
I started
⢠stretching by lamplight
⢠sitting in stillness
⢠writing thoughts Iâd spent years ignoring
⢠reading before the world woke
⢠honoring a sense of calm I didnât know I was missing
No one knew. This was my quiet revolution. My personal secret sanctuary.
The old me wouldâve said âYou? Awake before sunrise? Doing what? For fun?â
Past friends wouldâve demanded video evidence. My family wouldâve checked for signs of possession.
But I kept going.
đ The Routine That Found Me
Then came the moment that sealed the habit permanently.
One morning â a foggy, fragile morning â I stepped outside at 5:20 a.m. The world was wrapped in silver. Not dark, not bright â something in between, a breath held by the sky itself.
And I felt⌠aligned. Whole. Like nothing inside me was rushed or fractured or loud.
That stillness became my anchor.
That hour became my refuge.
That version of me became the one I wanted to keep.
And yes, it became routine.
â° Friends and Family Reactions
Hereâs where things get wild.
Because routines donât stay secret forever.
One day, my cousin spent the night. She assumed weâd stay up late watching movies like we always did. But at 5:20 a.m., I woke naturally â and she woke too, confused and disoriented.
âAre you okay?â she whispered.
âYes,â I said, slipping out of bed. âIâm just getting ready.â
âFor what? Surgery? A flight? An apocalypse?â
âFor my morning writing and tea.â
She stared at me. âOh my god. Youâre one of them now.â
My family didnât believe it until they visited and found me outside on the porch, wrapped in a blanket, sipping tea while the sky softened into pale gold.
My friends demanded proof, and when I sent a selfie with a timestamp, they accused me of editing it.
Truly, if past-me could see present-me now, sheâd call me a liar.
đ Why I Keep Doing It
I donât do it for discipline.
I donât do it to impress anyone.
I donât do it to feel superior or productive or perfectly put together.
I do it because it gives me a feeling nothing else ever has â a feeling the old me didnât even know existed.
The quiet before the world wakes feels like standing inside the breathing heart of the day. It holds space for thoughts I wouldâve drowned in noise. It lets me meet myself before I meet anyone else. It makes life feel gentler, even when everything else feels sharp.
And it taught me something I never expected
I donât have to stay who I used to be.
People change quietly sometimes. Easily. Shockingly.
Sometimes for no reason other than it feels good to become someone new.
đĽ Today
Today, waking at 5:20 a.m. feels like second nature. Like muscle memory. Like opening a door to a room that belongs to me alone.
Old me wouldnât believe it.
Maybe sheâd even fight it.
But if she could stand here now and watch me step into the early morning glow with tea in hand and peace in my chest⌠I think sheâd finally understand.
The life I have now wasnât planned.
It was discovered.
One early morning at a time.
About the Creator
Karl Jackson
My name is Karl Jackson and I am a marketing professional. In my free time, I enjoy spending time doing something creative and fulfilling. I particularly enjoy painting and find it to be a great way to de-stress and express myself.




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