I've been trying to build a better morning by using a habit stacking morning routine, where I chain small tasks together. It works great for a few days, but then one thing gets disrupted and the whole stack falls apart. How do you make a routine resilient enough to handle real-life interruptions?
The idea is fine but real life wont follow a flawless script. Make the stack modular with a core set of two or three non negotiable actions like drinking water and brushing teeth. Attach optional add ons only if the morning goes smoothly. If something is interrupted you still did the essentials. The key is that each piece can be done on its own.
I doubt a long chain survives a big disruption like a family morning chaos or a power outage. The trick is to treat the routine as a living plan and expect the chain to break sometimes.
Two tricks anchor the routine to one action you repeat every day. When interrupted start again from that anchor rather than trying to redo the whole stack. Have a quick two minute bailout list you can do when you only have a minute.
A minimal track and a full track works for me. If the full plan is derailed at least the minimal part happens and you keep the day moving.
Tell me what matters most in your mornings such as energy focus or getting ready on time. If you share I can help sketch a resilient version.
Sometimes a small sticky note with a plan B on the fridge saves the morning.