I cracked the code of discipline!

โ€”

After years of wondering what discipline is all about and how to make it a constant factor in my life, I think Iโ€™ve cracked the code today.

This morning I woke up early, and as with every day, I love spending my first hours doing something for myself before I start hustling for work. Thatโ€™s also the reason why I decided that Mondays will be a work-from-home day: I want to feel that Iโ€™m in control of my work life and not the other way around.

Today I decided to spend the first couple of hours reading the new novel Iโ€™ve started and have been enjoying very much. I got into the shower, made myself a cup of coffee, did some tidying around the kitchen, and then sat on my armchair next to my bedroom window, grabbed my book, sipped my coffee, and started reading.

I finished a couple of chapters and put the book aside. Looking at the clock, I realised there were still about twenty-five minutes before I needed to log in and start working, which I normally do at 9 a.m.

So I sat there with my thoughts, thinking about how the past couple of months have shown more development in my life than any months before. I think that since October I have been able to establish the kind of life Iโ€™ve always wanted: an active routine focused on self-care physically, emotionally, and socially.

A quiet a-ha moment

In one of those thoughts, I reflected on how much less dependent Iโ€™ve become on checking social media and looking at my phone every now and then. Iโ€™m still someone who appreciates responding to the people I love as quickly as I can because, for me, itโ€™s a sign of respect. But I spend much less time on my phone these days.

Thatโ€™s when I had a sort of a-ha moment. And it can be summed up in one sentence: itโ€™s not about achieving a perfect routine; itโ€™s not about not feeling the urge; itโ€™s about staying level-headed and in control while having those feelings.

Let me explainโ€ฆ

Letโ€™s stay with the example of checking social media. Just a few months ago, scrolling through social media was something I did every day and for hours. Thank God I had at least established the rule that I donโ€™t do this right when I wake up or before I sleep, because I usually keep my phone far away from me and out of reach from my bed. But it was still the default thing to turn to whenever I got a little bored.

I had imagined that, in order to achieve discipline, my state of mind should be one that totally eliminates the urge to do this, that I wouldnโ€™t even think about it or remember that I had social media accounts. This is how I imagined truly disciplined people operate. I was wrong.

The myth vs. reality of discipline

I had painted a perfect image in my head of what I should be in order to call myself disciplined. Now I realise that itโ€™s not perfect, and it never will be. Thereโ€™s no such thing.

Even the people who seem to โ€œmasterโ€ discipline still check social media or binge sometimes. So discipline, whether in the example of social media, food, swiping on dating apps, or smoking, is not about not feeling the need or not having the urge or never doing the thing at all; Itโ€™s actually about recognising the feeling but staying in control.

That doesnโ€™t happen overnight. It takes baby steps and a lot of spaceโ€”mental and emotional space.

Baby steps, awareness and embracing imperfection

First, you start with a baby step: something very small that you know will help you do less of whatever you tend to binge on. Even if that is fifteen minutes less on Netflix or five minutes more on the treadmill. Then you have to remain watchful.

What I mean by that is giving yourself the power to watch the feeling, the binge, or the urge come up like a mouse coming out of its tiny house. It lifts its head and itโ€™s there, you see it and you feel it. Thatโ€™s when you have to give yourself space. Sit there in silence while it happens.

Then you start a conversation with yourself and ask: Is this necessary right now? Is there an alternative? Am I doing this because Iโ€™m bored or because I genuinely need it?

You can also just sit there and watch it. And if you allow the feeling to come, you can let it pass. In many cases the urge will disappear a few minutes after you become aware of it (fully aware of it) in the sense of giving it your complete attention in the present moment.

And lastly, a very important step, and that is accepting and forgiving yourself fully if you slip into your bad habit during the day. This is important because feelings of shame and guilt could take you off track completely. It feels great to embrace our imperfect moments; it feels like love โค๏ธ

A small victory worth celebrating

This might be quite normal for someone else, but for me, as a person who has struggled with discipline almost all my life, this is a milestone! a revelation!

Simply knowing that I never had to be perfect, that I never had to embody that image of someone with a perfect routine and perfect discipline, who never even feels the urges, and realising that I can be imperfect and still in control warms my heart.

So I think today is a day to celebrate, though not with whatever I usually binge on. Itโ€™s a day to mark, and Iโ€™m marking it with this blog.

Itโ€™s a day to recognise that I now have the actual knowing of what discipline really is, not just the phrases and paragraphs from books and texts Iโ€™ve read or videos Iโ€™ve watched, but the deep, heart-level knowing of what discipline is and how I can play this game ๐Ÿ™‚

And now it’s almost 9:30 and I have to get to work ๐Ÿ’ป

2 responses to “I cracked the code of discipline!”

  1. Hi Manal, this blog entry comes at the right time for me.

    I have been struggling, and I still do struggle with discipline, all of my life. Especially when it comes to being too much in my head – as you know ๐Ÿ˜‰ – I have times when my head is so light and my heart is so open that I say to myself: oh my I would have never thought that I could feel so good.

    then suddenly another thought comes and the moment I latch onto it it’s over. The urge to analyze everything comes… I like the metaphor you used of the little mouse, I might be using it to delay any urgent response ๐Ÿ˜€

    I am very happy of the progress you made and agree 100% that it is not about being perfect; it’s about being consistent despite all. Finding a routine that works for you. Let the urge be there and decide to not give in. Say: ok, you are here, but you do not control me any more and gently let it go.

    Congratulations also on cutting doom scrolling, I am still working on that although I uninstalled all social media apps. Boredom is something we are not used to anymore, but we should embrace it and avoid filling it with meaningless things (or people).

    Wish you a great Monday ๐Ÿ˜˜๐Ÿ’–

    Enza

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Hi Enza! Sorry for seeing this comment so late! See, I am yet to master discipline when it comes to keeping a consistent writing pattern for this blog! I feel so lucky to have been one of the people who’ve seen part of the healing journey you’re on, and what I see just makes me smile and makes me confident about you. My side, what’s also helping me is to not seeing it as discipline anymore, but simply keeping up with the better version of me that I started to shape. I’m always there for you, the same way you always have been for me. Sending you lots of love โ™ฅ๏ธ and thank you so much for the comment, you are the very first commentator and I would never ask for a better person ๐Ÿ™‚

      Liked by 1 person

Leave a reply to ladydeliah Cancel reply

โ— About Me

Iโ€™m Manal; a girl whoโ€™s passionate about learning the intricate secrets of our universe, our spirits and the human adventure we came here to experience. I am a light seeker and I promised myself this year to be as authentic and kind as I can possibly be. These are my adventures as I venture on this path!

โ— Recent Articles