jmfargo: (Default)
I've been trying to get out of bed in the morning at 5 am for a while now, but always fall back under the soft, warm, welcoming covers to curl back up with my wife for another hour and a half. Last night, as I went to sleep, I asked Maria to set the alarm for 5 again, and told her that if I didn't wake up she could pinch me until I got out of bed.

At 5:01, I was out of bed this morning.

I'm still not really ready to jump out of bed in the morning and do something, but if I keep doing this my hope is that I will eventually get used to being up early and I will be "up and about," not just "up."

Why would I want to do this to myself? I mean, I enjoy sleep. I like snuggling with my wife. It's nice to cocoon myself with warm blankets. Why would I want to give that up?

If I get up at 5 AM every day and do something with that time, that's an hour and a half extra on week days. On weekends it's an extra four hours. That means that in the course of one average month I'll have added 62 productive hours. That's almost three whole extra days, just over one month.

But what am I going to do with the time?

Maybe you can help me with that.

What should I do with my extra time?

Keep in mind these following things:

My wife and dogs are sleeping for that hour and a half
I have a gym membership with the university
I take Arabic and soon French through the college
I have a list of 101 things to do in 1001 days

Thoughts?

Early

Dec. 17th, 2008 07:18 am
jmfargo: (Default)
Getting up at quarter after 6 in the morning, a half hour before the wife, the house is quiet. One out of the three dogs, the only one allowed to sleep outside of a cage at night, follows me into the living room, and plops onto her back, insisting on belly rubs before I'm allowed to do anything else.

A few minutes later and the sound of brewing coffee fills the air. It may not be my drink of choice, but my wife enjoys it so I make a small batch every morning. I start slowly turning on lights, allowing my eyes to adjust from near-pitch-black to well-lit. The house has gone from still, silent, and dark to bright, with the sounds of the brewer and smells of coffee wafting through the morning.

The heater usually kicks on now, startlingly loud in the still relatively restful morning, warming the water for the shower my wife will take in about a half hour, after she's woken up and had her coffee.

It's a perfect time, right before the day picks up, swoops in and carries tranquility away. Early morning rising's not too bad overall. If I could find a way to do it without the bleating of the alarm clock, it'd be heavenly.

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