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#neuroscience #psychology #discipline I send out a free newsletter every Thursday that'll improve your mental health & social skills. Join here (it takes 20 seconds): ⬇️🔥 https://www.newelofknowledge.com/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/newelofknow... Twitter: / newelofknow Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/1FRO4KM... 0:00 The real reason you struggle with consistency… 1:43 (1) The 3 biological waves 4:41 (2) The bigger picture (the 2 extremes) 7:47 (3) The middle way 8:50 (4) What to do next 12:01 My rhythmic routine 15:50 GO DEEPER: why you need to break routine 18:41 Summary & outro rizz FAQS for the video: 1.) What if I have a job and have to follow clock-time? You still have rhythm; you just apply it inside the fixed hours. Use the hours you can’t control as the “container” and build your waves within that container. Even one or two rhythmic windows (focus → movement → recovery) will fix your stability. 2.) What if I wake up at different times? Your rhythm shifts with you. The phases follow your waking time, not the clock. Wake at 7? Phase 1 = 7am–3pm. Wake at 9? Phase 1 = 9am–5pm. It’s dynamic (within reason), not fixed. 3.) Why is “one anchor per window” enough? Because consistency comes from reducing friction, not adding more rules. One anchor stabilises the whole window; the rest of the window stays flexible. 4.) What if my job / kids / school force me into chaos? Rhythm isn’t about controlling your environment. It’s about controlling your mode. Even if life is chaotic, shifting into the right “gear” (focus / movement / recovery) gives you control internally. 5.) Isn’t this basically “time-blocking but looser”? No. Time-blocking is “do X at Y time.” Rhythm is “when I’m in this state, I do things that fit the state.” It’s biology-first, not calendar-first. 6.) What if I slip and don’t follow it for a day? That’s the point; the routine is built to handle slip-ups. You don’t reset from zero. You just drop back into the next wave. 7.) Do I need to follow the exact waves you use? No. You design your own based on when your brain naturally switches gears. My example is just a template to show how it works. 8.) How long does it take to feel the difference? 24–72 hours. Your stress drops, your guilt evaporates, and your days feel smoother. 9.) Does this help with mental health? Yes. Your brain regulates mood through predictable rhythms. Rhythm gives your nervous system a stable signal. Chaos destroys it. 10.) Does this work differently for women because of the menstrual cycle? (Chat GBT answer): Yes — the daily rhythm still applies, but women also have a monthly rhythm layered on top. Men mostly run on a 24-hour hormonal cycle (testosterone peaks in the morning → dips at night). Women run on a roughly 28-day cycle with distinct phases that shift energy, mood, motivation and recovery: • Follicular Phase (Days 1–13): Rising energy, rising motivation, better recovery → great for focus, heavy lifting, deep work, planning, problem solving. • Ovulation (Around Day 14): Peak energy, confidence, social drive → great for social windows, collaboration, presenting, high-intensity training. • Luteal Phase (Days 15–28): Energy dips, mood becomes more sensitive, more need for rest → ideal for creative work, admin, light movement, planning. • Menstrual Phase (Days 1–5): Low energy, high need for recovery → best for low-intensity tasks, reflection, gentle movement, restorative routines. How this ties to the video: The daily rhythm (focus → creativity → recovery) is still true. But your monthly cycle adjusts the intensity of each window. Think of it like this: 👉 Daily rhythm = the structure 👉 Monthly cycle = the intensity dial So during follicular/ovulation, your Focus Window might be longer or stronger. During luteal/menstrual, your Recovery or Creative Window might expand or become gentler. The key gift of rhythmic routine is this: You stop beating yourself up for “inconsistency,” because you finally realise your biology moves in waves within waves. Women don’t break rhythm — they run a more sophisticated version of it.