Your body isn’t a machine that runs on willpower alone. Energy is a finite resource requiring active management. Here’s a checklist to help you protect and restore your energy.
Wake up at the end of a complete cycle (multiples of 90 minutes from when you actually fall asleep).
Time your nutrition
Start your day with front-loading protein (30 gram at breakfast), moderate complex carbs midday, and save simple carbs for the evening.
Time your largest meal for when you don’t need peak cognitive performance.
Use movement to restore
Schedule intense workouts during high-energy windows (typically morning).
Use 5-10 minute “movement snacks” every 90 minutes during work: walk, stretch, mobility drills. These aren’t workouts. They’re energy restoration.
Free up cognitive capacity
Offload working memory externally. Use a second brain system (notes, task managers) to free cognitive capacity.
Build attention restoration into your day. Five minutes looking at trees or listening to instrumental music restores 30-40% of depleted attention.
Batch cognitive load. Group similar tasks to reduce switching costs. Process all emails in 2-3 defined windows rather than 47 micro-sessions.
Opportunity: Design your environment
Optimize your schedule
Block your calendar for next week.
Mark your peak energy windows (typically 2-4 hours) and protect them ruthlessly. Schedule only your highest-value work for these windows/blocks.
Batch all meetings into specific afternoons.
Optimize your workspace
Work near windows when possible. Open windows for 10 minutes every 2 hours.
Keep workspace temperature slightly cool rather than warm.
Eliminate all non-essential notifications and close all browser tabs at end of work sessions.
At day’s end, shut down completely.
Optimize your social energy
Cluster draining interactions together when possible, followed by recovery time.
Never schedule energy-draining meetings before high-stakes work.
Protect time with energizing people when you’re depleted.
Motivation: Energy that matters
Följ dina framsteg
Note daily energy scores (1-10) at three time points: morning, midday, evening
Write a weekly qualitative notes: what worked, what didn’t, how you felt
Do a monthly review: patterns, improvements, adjustments needed
When you need energy right now
Sometimes you don’t have time for systemic energy management. You need a functional boost right now.
1. Breath: 30-second reset
Double inhale through your nose (one deep breath, then a sharp second inhale to fully expand lungs), followed by a long, slow exhale through your mouth. Repeat 1-3 times.
2. Movement: 1-minute recovery
Cognitive fatigue Rapid walking or stair climbing increases blood flow to the brain and provides immediate alertness.
Physical fatigue Gentle stretching or mobility work releases tension and activates recovery.
Emotional fatigue Expressive movement like shaking your limbs, dancing or power poses shifts your emotional state.
3. Cognitive offloading: 3-minute relief
Brain dump Take 3 minutes to write down everything looping in your head: tasks, worries, ideas, reminders and decisions. Don’t organize, just dump!
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