When you wake up in the morning, read this noun 30 times

By | January 18, 2020

Hollywood star and two-time Academy Award nominee Mark Wahlberg revealed this week that he wakes at 2:30am daily, launching into a regimen that includes a 90-minute workout, golf, prayer and recovering in a “cryo-chamber”. By 7:30 that night, he’s in bed.

He’s not the only high-profile early-riser. Apple CEO Tim Cook reportedly gets up at 3:45am, and Disney boss Bob Iger has a 4:25am scheduled workout that has apparently inspired NBA players to hit the gym earlier.

On LinkedIn and in profiles of corporate leaders, there’s often a common thread – if you want to be successful, get up early.So should we all become super-early birds? Would it help us be more productive?

It might – but there’s a cost. And possibly a hidden desire to impress people with just how “productive” we are with pre-dawn wake-up calls.While a 2:30am start would suggest an extremely long day and almost no sleep,

Wahlberg’s early bedtime suggests he’s running on a respectable seven hours each night.This is important for productivity – a lack of sleep takes huge tolls on your health and cognitive ability.

When you wake up in the morning, read this noun 30 times