The first ten minutes after waking up may seem negligible, but according to a new study, they are enough to shape our mood, energy and ultimately our performance for the rest of the day. The research, conducted on a sample of 2,000 adults, found that 37% of participants felt they could predict whether or not their day would go well based solely on the first few minutes after waking up.

t seems that any deviation from our usual morning routine — no matter how small — can be enough to throw us off balance, drain our energy, and, at times, unravel the entire day. The reason is surprisingly simple: it takes our bodies about 20–25 minutes to fully wake up. During this window, the repetition of small, familiar actions — a glass of water, a cup of coffee, a few stretches, or even just a moment of quiet — offers us a much-needed sense of stability and control. And when that sense is disrupted, even by something as trivial as a misplaced towel or an empty coffee pot, the consequences often show up swiftly and uninvited.
This is where a faint echo from our childhood rises up from the collective unconscious: “Just ten more minutes…” — the classic plea to our mother when she came to wake us for school. Only now, as adults, those ten minutes aren’t negotiable. They might be the most crucial part of the day.

Your Routine Is Yours Alone
No one is suggesting we adopt the extreme routines of celebrities like Mark Wahlberg, who rises at 3:30 a.m. for prayer and workouts, or Anna Wintour, who hits the tennis court before her first meeting. What matters is creating a ritual — simple, repeatable, realistic — that aligns with your personal rhythm and needs.
Studies reveal just how fragile those first moments of the day can be:
- 38% of people feel out of sync without their morning coffee or tea.
- 28% say that skipping water leaves them feeling off.
- 22% are negatively impacted when they miss out on physical activity.
The Subtle Saboteur: Morning Doomscrolling
And then there’s the modern trap many of us fall into before our feet even touch the floor: our phones. That innocent screen tap — often followed by an endless scroll through grim news and overstimulating content — can quietly hijack the morning. What begins as a quick check-in becomes an emotional ambush, saturating our nervous system before we’ve even made our bed.
Research in psychology and neuroscience confirms that early exposure to stress-inducing or threatening stimuli spikes cortisol levels (the body’s main stress hormone), reinforcing a sense of helplessness or vulnerability. We don’t start the day with intention; we start it with alarm. That morning scroll doesn’t wake us up — it traps us.
Instead, what if we offered ourselves a few moments without screens? A bit of light, a few deep breaths, a quiet “good morning” to ourselves? Both body and mind crave a sense of safety in order to function — and thrive.
The Morning Actually Begins the Night Before
Still, nothing replaces a good night’s sleep. About 70% of respondents in recent surveys say they feel their day flows better when they’ve slept well. Interestingly, most people report averaging six hours of sleep, yet nearly three out of four say they’d feel significantly better with just one more.
The goal isn’t to become a hyper-efficient morning superhero. It’s to shape a morning that serves your life, not someone else’s. A clean mug for your coffee, a patch of sunlight, a sip of water, and a breath of calm. That’s where the secret of a good day might lie — not in effort, but in consistency.
And maybe, just maybe, in not leaving the fate of your morning in the hands of the snooze button.
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