Open your notebook and answer three cues: What matters most, what might derail it, and what you will do first. Keep sentences short, verbs strong, and commitments observable. This single page becomes a moral compass and operating blueprint you can reference when interruptions try to rewrite your priorities.
Stand or sit tall, inhale for four, hold for four, exhale for six, repeat five rounds. Only then open email. This brief ritual interrupts reactive loops, strengthens attentional control, and reminds your nervous system that urgency is evaluated, not obeyed, until values validate action.
List three virtues you will practice today—prudence, courage, temperance—and assign one behavior for each within your calendar blocks. When meetings collide or crises erupt, you have preselected how to be. Decisions speed up, regret drops, and the schedule becomes character training instead of firefighting.
Take today’s biggest worry and split it into columns: influence, partial influence, none. Draft one behavior for the first, one boundary for the second, and one release phrase for the third. Post it visibly. Repeat daily until the sorting becomes instant habit.
Translate spiraling thoughts into clear roles: founder, manager, maker. For each role, write one next action under your control. Schedule them. When the mind rehashes outcomes, return to roles. Outcomes follow probabilities; roles follow principles. Principles, practiced repeatedly, compound into reliable performance.