Stop Reacting to Your Day — Start Blocking It On Your Calendar
I used to think calendar blocking was for uptight corporate robots. Then I tried it during a genuinely chaotic month, and now I'm that person defending it to anyone who'll listen.
Here's the thing — when everything lives in your head as a vague "I should do that today," your brain burns energy just holding it all. But when it has a slot? A time, a spot, a little rectangle of its own? Suddenly it's not a decision anymore; it's just...the next thing. Even stuff like "eat lunch" or "reply to texts" gets a block, because apparently my brain needs permission to stop doom-scrolling and actually chew food.
The magic isn't really about productivity (and what, really, is productivity in active postpartum/newborn life); it's about the relief of not having to negotiate with yourself sixty times a day. Try it for a week. You'll feel unreasonably smug.
Other habit-stacking ideas to survive a structured workday:
Pair your coffee with your top 3 priorities — write them while it brews, not after
Stretch during every call where your camera's off.
Drink a full glass of water before checking Slack — hydration before chaos.
Do a 2-minute tidy right before lunch — clear desk, clear head for round two.
Queue tomorrow's outfit while you shut your laptop — one less morning decision.
Take a walk during your first phone call of the day — movement + task, zero extra time.
Journal one line of "what worked today" as your literal last calendar block.
Small stacks, big relief.
Ask Clara:
"How do I habit stack?"