Each video is one hour of someone's day filmed in full — the alarm, the journal, the cold water, the work. Watch it. Steal it. Make it yours.

I'm not a productivity guru. I'm someone who burned out at 28 and spent two years figuring out what a sustainable day actually looks like. These videos are the journal I wish I'd found.
An analog alarm. Bare feet on cold hardwood. The kettle. No phone for the first hour.
The first ritual isn't complicated — it's just not negotiable. This video walks through the exact sequence: alarm at 5:58, two glasses of water, five minutes of stillness, then the journal cracked open under the desk lamp. No optimization. Just presence.
Best watched before your first coffee — let the foley sink in.
One task. A physical timer. No notifications. The Pomodoro is dead — here's what replaced it.
This is the most-stolen section of the channel. A 90-minute block that starts with a single handwritten sentence: what does done look like today? No apps, no dashboards. The output is one thing finished, not ten things started.
Watch this the night before. Then do it the next morning.
A ten-minute walk. A meal eaten without a screen. The brain can't sprint all day — here's the pivot.
The mistake most people make is treating noon like a minor interruption. This video makes the case for a real break — 20 minutes of movement, a slow meal, five minutes of nothing. It's the hinge that makes the afternoon possible.
The shortest video. Possibly the most important.
Fountain pen. Cream stock. Three questions. The day doesn't end — it gets filed.
Every evening, the same three questions written by hand: What actually happened today? What am I carrying into tomorrow? What's one thing I'd do differently? This isn't journaling as therapy — it's journaling as system architecture. Watch the pen move.
This one gets paused a lot. People are usually writing alongside.
The whole day. One playlist.
All five rituals in sequence — 5 AM to 10 PM.
One free daily template — the same structure from the videos, formatted as a single printed page. No app required. Just a printer and a fountain pen.
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