
Life is Routines - Why This Changes Everything (Day 1968)
Today, as I laced up my Vibram FiveFingers for day 1968 of this daily running streak, something clicked about the power of routines that I had to share.
I've now covered 19,680 kilometres towards my 40,075km lap of the world, which means 20,395km still to go. But here's what struck me during today's run: this entire journey isn't powered by motivation or dramatic moments of inspiration. It's built on the simple, unglamorous foundation of routine.
The thing about routines is that most people think of them as boring or restrictive. What I've discovered over 1,968 consecutive days is the complete opposite. Routines are liberation. They're the framework that makes extraordinary things possible through ordinary consistency.
Think about it this way: everything in life can be broken down into routines. Some happen daily - like my morning ritual of waking, hydrating, and getting out the door for my run. Some are weekly - perhaps paying staff or taking children to activities. Others might only happen once in a lifetime, but if we approach them with a routine mindset, we're prepared when they arise.
The power isn't in the routine itself. It's in understanding that small, repeated actions compound exponentially over time. When I started this streak in 2019, day 1,968 seemed impossibly far away. But by focusing on today's routine - just today's run - I've somehow arrived here.
What I've learned is that positive routines need three things to stick: documentation, reinforcement, and consistency. I document every run through these vlogs. I reinforce the habit by connecting it to something bigger than myself - raising £1M for children's causes. And I maintain consistency regardless of how I feel on any given day.
The beautiful thing about routine-based thinking is that it removes the pressure of perfection. I don't need to run a perfect 10k every day. I just need to run. Some days are harder than others - today I actually got a bit lost on my route - but the routine continues regardless.
This applies to every area of life. If you want to improve your health, don't rely on motivation to get you to the gym. Build a routine. If you want to grow your business, don't wait for inspiration to strike. Create systems and follow them consistently.
The marginal gains from tiny routine improvements compound in ways that seem almost magical from the outside. But from the inside, it's just the result of showing up, day after day, regardless of circumstances.
As I reflect on the 20,395 kilometres still ahead of me, I'm not thinking about the magnitude of that distance. I'm thinking about tomorrow's routine. Wake up, hydrate, run, vlog, repeat. One day closer to completing this lap of the world and reaching that £1M fundraising goal for Great Ormond Street Hospital and BBC Children in Need.
The children we're raising money for don't have the luxury of waiting for motivation to strike. They need consistent, reliable support. That's what drives my routine, and it's what can drive yours too.
Every routine you build, every small improvement you make consistently, creates ripple effects you can't even see yet. The question isn't whether you're motivated today. The question is: what routine will you commit to that will still be serving you in 1,968 days' time?





