Why you might need a reset routine
Sheryl Garratt
I coach creative professionals. Because creative work matters. Follow me for posts about creative process, and making a good living from your work.
Summer is coming to an end. This is the season the French call la rentrée: that point when the holidays are over, the new school year has begun, and we all fall back into more familiar routines.
In August I’m always pretty relaxed about my writing routines, but September is when I set my alarm earlier and go back to writing from 8-9am every weekday, without fail. I also do a reset on my business, and plan out the final four months of the year so I finish strong.
For times like this, a reset routine is invaluable to get you back into flow quickly.
Creative work is often unpredictable.
An exciting new job comes in. A deadline moves forward. A project that had been on hold for months suddenly gets the go-ahead and takes over your life. Or a project that you thought would take a week swallows a whole month instead, putting you behind on everything else.
No matter how well-organised we are, no matter how regular we are in our work habits and routines, there are always times when life has other plans.?
We can’t avoid these. And many of us don’t want to. We thrive on variety and enjoy the adrenalin rush of a tight deadline, a new and exciting project coming unexpectedly.?
The trick is not to let these derail us completely. To do what we need to do, then go back to our regular creative habits as quickly as possible.?
My reset routine grew out of necessity.
There was a point in my journalism career when I often travelled to LA or New York for interviews, usually flying from London and back in a couple of days – and very rarely in the part of the plane where you get to stretch out and sleep.?
After getting home tired and jet-lagged, I’d often lapse into a kind of dazed half-life. I’d stare slack-jawed at daytime TV, spend hours scrolling social media and answering unimportant emails, or wander round the house aimlessly touching things, unable to remember why I’d gone into that room.?
I was too tired to know what I needed.?
So I developed a checklist to remind me to shower, unpack and put a laundry on as soon as I got in. I’d drink at least eight glasses of water, ticking them off my list, one by one for a few days, until it became automatic again.
Before I left, I made sure the fridge was stocked with fruit, salads and lean protein to replace the sugary and salty snacks I knew I’d crave. And if I was tempted to sleep before evening, I did some gentle stretches then went out for a walk instead.?
The following day, I went to my desk even if all I did was stare at the blank screen or rant in my journal, feeling sorry for myself. I’d give it an hour or so. If I was still not writing my feature?by then, I’d go out to a coffee shop, order a strong kick of caffeine, and work there.?
It’s absurd for a grown human to need this. I often felt like a real-life tamagotchi toy, methodically caring for my own needs.?But following my list, step by step, always got me back in rhythm more quickly than my old routine of lying on the sofa eating chocolate Hob-Nobs and watching?Homes Under The Hammer.?
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This is why you need a reset routine
We all have times like this. A tour, a theatre run, a big deadline or rush job that takes over everything. That weird lull after the end of a long and involving creative project (a book, film, album, show, fashion collection, exhibition).?
A reset routine gives you a comfortable place to land, to recover, and to regain your rhythms quickly, whatever life throws your way.?
Create one, and keep tweaking it until it works for you. Then keep it somewhere handy for when you need it. Mine lives on my phone, a checklist of items I tick off when I’m tired or just struggling to get back into my rhythms.
Here’s what to consider:
Not all resets have to be dramatic.?
After a day or two off, your reset routine can just be about clearing your head and/or your workspace, and writing down your priorities. Once you’re clear what matters, decide how long you’re going to work before you take a break. Then begin.?
During a normal working day, it can be as simple as clearing your desk, stretching or taking a couple of deliberate, deep breaths before you move from one task to another.?
Emotional resets are important, too.?
Don’t just push your feelings down and plough on after an upsetting email or phone call. Rejection hurts. Disappointment, too. Criticism can be useful, but it’s also wounding.?
Acknowledge how you’re feeling. Name it. It can be oddly helpful just to say to yourself, “I feel hurt that I didn’t get a grant this time round – and that two of my friends did. I’m envious of them and I feel bad about that, too.”
Then let it out. Put some music on and dance it out for a couple of minutes. Thump a cushion. Vent in your diary. Or just sit quietly and fully?feel?whatever it is you’re feeling.?This is often far more helpful than replaying it in your head on a loop for the rest of the day/week/month. You’ll get over it faster, and it won’t distort into depression, or a sudden irrational burst of anger later.?
So: what disrupts your usual patterns?
What throws you off-balance most often? And what might help you recover faster?
Digital Marketer!
6 个月I totally agree that resetting a routine can be quite the challenge. It’s often easy to fall back into old habits and lose track of our goals. From my experience, simply making a few tweaks to your routine isn't always enough. Sometimes, you need a more structured approach to get back on track. What really helped me was bringing in an accountability partner. Having someone to check in with not only added that extra layer of responsibility but also provided the encouragement I needed to stick with the new routine. It made a huge difference in my ability to stay consistent and motivated. Sharing the link just in case it helps someone: www.t.ly/4P_Ge