I texted a buddy of mine last week and we agreed to read a parenting book together. Our kids are drifting into a new stage, the one where the old chapters stop applying, and neither of us wanted to wing it.
What struck me when I hit send was a memory from the last round of parenting books, years ago, when my girls were tiny. The books helped before I applied a single technique from them. The reading itself did the work. Twenty minutes with someone else’s hard-won patience and I was a more patient dad by dinner. I hadn’t practiced anything. I had just been marinating.
That’s the whole trick, and it costs almost nothing, doesn’t it?
Your brain takes posture cues from whatever you feed it. This isn’t manifesting. Nothing in the universe rearranges itself because you listened to a podcast.
It’s closer to stretching before a run.
The input warms up the part of you that’s about to be needed.
I used to work with an agency that served the director of marketing for Wisconsin tourism, a man who read a new book roughly every month and then wanted to test what he learned, immediately, with us. The agency learned to brace every thirty days. Some people complained. I admired the hell out of it. He had built a machine where intake became experiment on a fixed schedule, and his curiosity set the weather for every team that touched his account.
Real talk…I’d have appreciated a heads-up about the forecast, but the system itself was beautiful.
I’ll admit the counterexample, because I know him personally: a marketing friend of mine who reads nothing about marketing, business, or entrepreneurship at all, and who is very good at his job. So this is not a law of physics. Some people get their inputs from somewhere I can’t see. But for most of us, the lever is sitting right there.
Which brings me to Denzel Washington. I watched an interview where he advocated for five minutes of nothing after you wake up. Just lie there. No phone, no inbox, no charging into the day. You with you. I am not going to argue with Denzel, and I’m not going to improve on the first five minutes.
I want to talk about the second five.
After the stillness, before the day grabs you, you get one clean window where nothing has claimed your attention yet. Spend it consuming something aimed at who you’re trying to become. Five minutes of a book on the thing you want to build. Five minutes of someone who already lives where you’re headed. Library app, YouTube, a single page, an AI summary of a chapter you’ll never otherwise reach. The format doesn’t matter. The aim (that warm up stretch?) does.
Marketers already know this works because we do it to other people for a living.
Nobody buys a trail running shoe the moment they see the ad. They buy it after weeks of accidentally consuming trail running, until one day the identity fits and the purchase is just paperwork. Brands don’t sell products to strangers. They feed people inputs until the people aren’t strangers to the idea anymore.
The second five minutes is simply running that play on yourself, and choosing the brand manager. (Cough cough That’s you…)
The same goes if you lead a team, by the way. Your people are marinating in something every day, and the strongest flavor in the pot is you. (Okay, getting a little weird. Lost your appetite, but you got the point.)
My buddy and I start the book next week. I already know the first chapter will work before I finish it. Not because the advice is good, though it probably is.
Because for five minutes, I’ll be a guy who reads about being a better dad, and that guy walks into the kitchen differently.
Stay Positive & Might Be The Best 10 Minutes Of Every Day
