8 things successful people do before going to bed

Before sleeping, it is essential for eentrepreneurs to clear their mind if they want to get proper rest

Sleep is essential for an entrepreneur since s/he works hard all day and has to deal with stress and a lot of tasks. Before sleeping, it is essential for people to clear their mind if they want to get proper rest. Since, an entrepreneur works really hard; s/he needs rest to recover from all the stress they have been through during the day.

Here are 8 things successful people do before going to bed:

1. Read

Reading is something most successful people do before going to sleep. You might not be a voracious reader but reading articles or features about success can motivate you and put you at peace. Also, when you read, you learn more and have a chance to educate yourself about a field better.



2. Spend quality time with your loved ones

Because an entrepreneur tends to be busy all day, s/he might not get enough time with their loved ones. However, it is important to spend time with your loved ones as they are the people you have on whom you can fall back on. Conversing or sharing things with your family will put you at peace internally and you can go to sleep with a lighter heart.

Related post: 4 mindsets every entrepreneur should adopt

3. Plan for tomorrow

An entrepreneur has a million things to do in a day so it is always better to plan ahead. Before retiring for the day, one can make a to-do list for the next day to sort out their near future. Also, most successful people like to take calculated steps like ironing their clothes and getting important documents ready for the next day.

4. Meditate

Meditation is a great form of relaxation and can help you cleanse you of all stresses and problems you’ve faced during the day. Also, meditation is a great practice as it energises you for the next day. Your body and mind will be at complete peace after you mediate. For starters, you can begin with five minutes and go higher gradually.



5. List down your accomplishments

An entrepreneur needs to find motivation in the smallest of things as one might feel a little low when things don’t go well. Successful people usually make a list of small but important accomplishments throughout the day. On days, when you are feeling severely low, you can go back to reading those accomplishments and feel good about yourself. Also, writing down good stuff before you sleep helps you rest better.

Related post: 7 Ways entrepreneurs stay motivated

6. Complete your tasks for the day

If something needs to be done today; do not leave it for later. If a mail needs to be replied to, do it before you sleep because you might forget it later. Also, it is always better to clear your mind of tasks one needs to complete in a day. That way you will be able to work with a clearer mind the next day.

7. Go for a stroll

Walks in fresh air helps in reducing stress and anxiety as it helps you to get rid of all the workload. Walking is a mild exercise which helps you freshen your mind and get a better sleep at night.



8. Unplug from the world completely

Stop using your phone when you’re going to sleep because the blue light from your phone mimics the brightness of the sun, which tells your brain to stop producing melatonin, an essential hormone that regulates your circadian rhythm which tells your body when to wake and when to sleep. Unplugging from social media and work completely ensures a deeper sleep at night.

Image credit: pinterest.com





How entrepreneurs are risking their health?

Entrepreneurs have enough risk to deal with; credit risk, cash flow risk, market risk. Make sure not to let good health be one of the things risked

Being an entrepreneur can have significant effect on your health. It involves being extremely self-motivated, the ability to wear multiple hats throughout each day, a huge amount of risk and a lot of stress. Although the payoffs of entrepreneurship can be huge, the price can often be damage to the well-being of the entrepreneurs behind successful businesses. Below is a list of four of the most common ways entrepreneurs forget to take care of themselves and simple solutions for each one.

Sitting for extended periods of time

According to The Huffington Post sitting is the new smoking. Although some entrepreneurs work outside in their respective fields, due to technological advancements, a growing number of entrepreneurs can work almost completely online. Since entrepreneurs typically work much longer hours than the average employee, 60 hours per week or more. All that time on the computer can mean a lot of time sitting stagnantly. Web MD cites sitting too much as a growing cause of mental illness and heart disease.

To offset this, entrepreneurs should set regular schedules for themselves which include reminders to stand, stretch, walk and do physical activity to break up the work day. Furniture manufacturers have started releasing desks that allow standing. One manufacturer even offers a desk that has bicycle pedals underneath to help keep entrepreneurs in shape while staying on top of their email.

Water quality

According to the US Geological Survey your body is over 60 percent water and your brain and heart are over 73 percent water. It stands to reason then that water is one of the most important aspects of our life. Since the majority of Americans eat food and drink water that makes their body acidic, overall health in the country is on a decline as we all know. Thankfully, there is an easy fix for this.

The answer is drinking water that makes your body more alkaline (raises your pH). Many doctors know that alkaline water helps to stop disease, increase brain function, give you more energy, slow down your aging process and much more. Your average tap water or bottled water is not going to help you though unfortunately. You need to drink an Alkaline Water that gives the most health benefits such as Amphora Water or Essentia Water. This will dramatically increase your overall health and even make you smarter. Every entrepreneur wants to be more intelligent. There are some of the best water softeners available in market today, thry this https://watersoftenershub.com/best-water-softeners/



Air quality

Air quality is one of the most overlooked threats to all people, but especially entrepreneurs who typically spend more time inside than a regular 40 hour per week employee, whether in a home office or at their place of work.  Indoor air quality is considered by the Environmental Protection Agency to be one of the top pollution threats to Americans. Indoor air may contain thousands of chemicals and impurities and also may be many times more polluted than the air outside. Some of the side effects of poor air are reduced concentration and memory, two things busy entrepreneurs cannot risk compromising. Allergies, asthma and other respiratory, cardiovascular and nerve issues can be aggravated as well.

According to Robert Meirovich, CEO of Airbiotics, a manufacturer of probiotic air purifying devices and cleaners, “Entrepreneurs need to be aware of the variety of health risks there are from spending too much time inside their home or offices, and that technology exists to fix the problem.” Improvements in air purification technology have given entrepreneurs the ability to offset some of the damage from spending too much time inside without having to cut down on their productivity by going outside more. The other solution, to take frequent breaks throughout the day and spend time outdoors, is not always practical for those who live in the cold or have busy workloads. Either way, entrepreneurs who spend long hours at home, in a car, on in their office need to be mindful of the risks to their health around them and do their best to stay ahead of it.

Eating habits

A busy lifestyle and big workload is a virtually guaranteed recipe for making bad diet choices.  People who get busy or have a lot of responsibilities may skip breakfast, eat only once per day, or eat nutrient deprived fast food for one or more meals per day.

Since the body turns food into energy, and entrepreneurs need lots of it, it is very important to make good dietary choices to keep productivity as high as possible. Meal planning is one way to avoid making bad diet choices.  Setting aside one or two nights per week to prepare and package reheatable, healthy meals and snacks for the days ahead will save precious time and improve health and energy. Entrepreneurs should consume food that is high in protein, vitamins and healthy fats and avoid foods high in chemicals and carbs since these will likely cause a crash in energy. For entrepreneurs that do not know how to cook, there are several companies that ship premade meals directly to home or office like My Fit Foods and Factor 75. Think of the body being a vehicle and the food being the fuel, if poor quality fuel is put in, bad performance is sure to follow.

Entrepreneurs have enough risk to deal with; credit risk, cash flow risk, market risk. Make sure not to let good health be one of the things risked when so much can be done in the modern world to prevent it. We know that grinding long hours is important to making it big, but living long enough to see your success is by far more important.

This article was originally published in Entrepreneur.com



Entrepreneurs: Fight procrastination and do the stuff right now

For some of us, procrastination isn’t an occasional kind of thing. It locks us in a vise grip and comes to define the way we approach everything.

“Never leave that till tomorrow which you can do today,” said Benjamin Franklin.

Pretty good advice, especially considering it comes from a guy who was an absolute whiz at productivity (Franklin was somehow an author, printer, politician, postmaster, scientist, inventor, civic activist, statesman and diplomat).

Recognizing the wisdom in the aphorism, however, won’t stop most of us from putting off the “no-more-delaying-ever” regiment until tomorrow. (Which isn’t always so terrible: We’re not robots, after all, and leaving a project unfinished so we can hit the beach every once in a while keeps us human.)

But, for some of us, procrastination isn’t an occasional kind of thing. Instead, it locks us in a vise grip and comes to define the way we approach everything. If you’re like this, you know the exhausting ritual well: voluntarily delay a necessary task until the panic about meeting a deadline finally outweighs inaction. Not only can it send you into an unhealthy and crippling shame-spiral, it’s also one giant productivity killer.

Why are some of us more susceptible than others? Like most personality traits, a recent study published in Psychological Science finds, it has a lot to do with our genes.

Researchers at the University of Colorado at Boulder surveyed 181 pairs of identical twins and 166 pairs of fraternal twins about their work habits. Compared to fraternal twin pairs, identical twins reported stronger behavioral similarities regarding their ability to set and meet goals as well as their tendency to act impulsively. Based on this, the researchers concluded that procrastination is, at least in part, heritable and has a strong genetic overlap with impulsivity.

Impulsivity probably had an evolutionary advantage, Daniel Gustavson, the study’s lead author, says. For our ancestors – struggling to survive in a dangerous world, fast and decisive decision making was more important than long-term planning. Procrastination either evolved at the same time as impulsivity, or “evolved as a byproduct of it,” he says (when we’re impulsive, we become distracted from — and thereby put off — long-term goals). Unfortunately, circa now, where both goal management and the ability to delay gratification is rewarded, these two intertwined genetic traits hurt rather than harm.



But before you start blaming your penchant for leaving everything to the last minute on mom and dad, remember: most of our personality traits are, at least in part, heritable. The last thing the Gustavson wants is for people to read about his study and conclude: Welp, guess that means I’ll never change. “When people see big genetic influences on a trait, they often think they can’t do anything about it,” he says. “And that’s not true. Just because something is heritable doesn’t mean it can’t be changed.”

Tim Pychyl, a psychology professor at Carleton University in Ontario, Canada, and the author of ‘Solving the Procrastination Puzzle’, agrees.

The way he sees it, our limbic system (the ancient, reptilian part of our brain which just wants to feel good now) is in constant battle with the prefrontal cortex (a section that developed later in our evolution, responsible for executive functions and impulse control). Inevitably, the limbic system sometimes wins out. “It’s human nature to procrastinate,” he says. “You have to realize that you’ll screw up sometimes but you can change if you really want to.”

For all of us wrestling with genes that scream, “delay, delay, delay,” Pychyl shares a few strategies to help the prefrontal cortex emerge victorious.

Understand the true definition of procrastination.
This is super important. There are many forms of delay that are beneficial – life, of course, is a constant succession of tradeoffs. Often, you need to hold off on a project because something more pressing has come up. That’s not called procrastination, though. That’s called making an informed decision.
Procrastination on the other hand, says Pychyl, is never positive. “Anyone who thinks it has an upside is messing with the definition.”

Some of us may develop a warped, protective relationship with our tendency to procrastinate (see tip No. 2), but while there are many reasons why we do it, “none of them are healthy,” Pychyl says. “There’s no virtue in it.”

Stop making excuses.

This is closely related to Pychyl’s previous point. Procrastination is a voluntary delay of a beneficial intended act, and therefore causes uncomfortable dissonance, which we attempt to ease with a string of excuses.
The most common: I work better under pressure. “That’s nonsense!” Pychyl says.

“Everyone makes more mistakes under pressure – that’s been shown again and again. What you’re really saying is ‘the only thing that can motivate me to work is a huge amount of time pressure’…and there’s certain pathos in that.”

While procrastination can cause individuals to hyper focus, it’s simply because their backs are against the wall. The same amount of attention to detail – flow, as Pychyl calls it – is possible even when you aren’t under a time crunch. Learning how to voluntarily achieve a flow state requires time and effort but it’s the secret to productivity. Procrastinators, he says, need to realize that it is possible to concentrate without the motivation of deadline-induced panic. It just takes practice.

Minimize distractions and set strict deadlines.

If you have every distraction available at the push of a button, you’re more likely to check Facebook, check your emails, and suddenly three hours have gone by. Distractions, of course, decrease productivity for everyone, but for the chronic procrastinator, they’re real time-suckers. It’s better to eliminate as many of them as possible (be that blocking Facebook, deleting Solitaire off your desktop, whatever you have to do).

In addition, set a strict schedule for yourself. “Autonomy is good for non-procrastinators, put procrastinators need short, concrete deadlines,” Pychyl says. For managers dealing with procrastinating employees, Pychyl recommends having them articulate their goals in concrete terms. Specific details – rather than a vague “I’m working on X project – helps hold procrastinators accountable. Have them make implementation intentions rather than goal intentions” he recommends.

Don’t let your inner 6-year-old dictate your actions.

“I don’t know where we learn this, but somehow we internalize the notion that our motivational state has to match the task at hand,” says Pychyl. “We don’t feel like doing something, and we think that’s a reason!”
He calls this logic 6-year-old thinking. In reality, “For many of important tasks, if not most of them, getting started has nothing to do with how we feel.”

Still, we often dismiss the notion of getting started today with the perpetually hopeful “I’ll feel more like it tomorrow.” We almost never do, though, and so the task gets pushed off again. Why, then, do we persist in maintaining the delusion that a repellent task will be magically rendered less aversive in a mere 24 hours?

We tend to predict our future feelings based on present feelings, Pychyl explains. (Think about shopping for groceries on an empty stomach versus after you’ve just eaten a huge meal – most likely, your cart will be more crowded, even though rationally you know the week ahead requires the same amount of food). “When you decide to procrastinate, you relieve some stress which makes you feel good. So when you predict how you’re going to feel tomorrow, you base your prediction on your current mood.”

In addition, brain scans have shown that we tend to think about our future self as we would think about a stranger (known as temporal discounting), which explains why we often overestimate our ability/desire to accomplish an unappealing but necessary task three weeks from now.

The biggest myth that procrastinators need to dissolve if they want to break the delay cycle? “I’ll do it tomorrow,” says Pychyl. “Once you realize that this is an avoidant coping strategy, you’re on your way.”

Image Credit: incolors.club