Question
How do I apply the idea that the minimum viable routine?
Quick Answer
Choose your most important daily routine — the one whose absence you feel most acutely. Write down every action in the full version with approximate durations. Now identify the essential function of that routine — not what you do, but what it accomplishes for you (cognitive reset, physical.
The most direct way to practice is through a focused exercise: Choose your most important daily routine — the one whose absence you feel most acutely. Write down every action in the full version with approximate durations. Now identify the essential function of that routine — not what you do, but what it accomplishes for you (cognitive reset, physical activation, emotional regulation, creative priming, or whatever the honest answer is). Strip the routine to the fewest actions that still deliver that essential function, with a total duration under ten minutes. Write this minimum viable version on a card or in a note you can access anywhere. Tomorrow, execute only the MVR — even though your full routine is available — and assess whether the essential function was preserved. If yes, you have a valid MVR. If not, the function you identified was wrong or the actions you kept were the wrong ones. Revise and test again.
Common pitfall: Designing an MVR that is just a shorter version of the full routine rather than a functionally reduced version. If your full exercise routine is a thirty-minute run and your MVR is a ten-minute run, you have not identified the essential function — you have just compressed the same activity. The essential function of your exercise might be "elevate heart rate and activate major muscle groups," which can be achieved with five minutes of bodyweight movements that require no equipment, no running shoes, and no shower afterward. A duration-compressed routine still depends on the same infrastructure. A function-preserved routine is infrastructure-independent.
This practice connects to Phase 59 (Behavioral Resilience) — building it as a repeatable habit compounds over time.
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