
274 - 5-Minute Habits That Actually Change Your Life
Start with Small Steps
Commit to Beginning, Not Finishing
Jill explains the power of starting small—five-minute beginnings that overcome overwhelm and build momentum.
The habits that change your life most are rarely the dramatic ones. They are the five-minute ones — the invisible ones — that compound quietly over months and years until the trajectory of your life has shifted in ways you never could have predicted from a single day. In this episode I walk through the specific small habits that have made the biggest difference in my own life, organized around four categories: morning anchors, friction design, habit stacking, and automatic systems. These are not theoretical. They are things I actually do, including some I stumbled into by accident and some I built deliberately after years of trying harder things that did not work. Morning anchors are the first category — small actions at the start of the day that set the frame for everything that follows. Drinking water before coffee or food addresses the mild dehydration most of us carry through our mornings without knowing it. Getting two minutes of natural sunlight supports your circadian rhythm and lifts mood in ways artificial light simply cannot replicate. Reading one page of something meaningful — even one page of the Bible — instead of reaching for your phone can add up to fifteen or twenty books over the course of a year. And beginning the morning with prayer or a moment of deliberate gratitude changes the lens through which you see every decision that follows. Friction design is the second category, and it is where I have seen the most consistent results. The principle is simple: make the things you want to do easier, and make the things you do not want to do inconvenient. I do not ban junk food. I just do not buy it on a regular grocery run. Getting Doritos requires a separate trip to the store, which is apparently too much effort. I have used this same logic with snack placement in my home, with my phone during conversations, and with the candy bowls at my office. Nobody felt deprived. The behavior just quietly changed. Habit stacking is the third category. The habits that last are almost always the ones attached to behaviors you already do reliably — ankle exercises while brushing teeth, wiping a counter zone during every standing break, carrying something with you every time you go up or down stairs. No extra willpower required. The old habit carries the new one. The fourth category is automatic systems — habits that run without any decision being made. Saving a fixed amount from every paycheck before you see it. Saving the full difference every time you get a raise, because you already proved you could live on the old amount. I have been doing this for nearly thirty years. It is not exciting. It is exactly how I built the retirement savings I have. One percent better, every day. James Clear did the math in Atomic Habits. The small steps do not feel significant in the moment. That is precisely why they work.
Jill’s Links
http://jillfromthenorthwoods.com
https://www.youtube.com/@startwithsmallsteps
https://www.buymeacoffee.com/startwithsmallsteps
Email the podcast at jill@startwithsmallsteps.com
By choosing to watch this video or listen to this podcast, you acknowledge that you are doing so of your own free will. The content shared here reflects personal experiences and opinions and is intended for informational and inspirational purposes only. I am not a licensed healthcare provider, psychiatrist, or counselor. Any advice or suggestions offered should not be considered a substitute for professional medical or mental health advice. You are solely responsible for any decisions or actions you take based on this content.


