Tag: 5 am club

  • The 5am Version of Me Knows Things I Don’t Yet Know

    There’s a very specific kind of silence that only exists at 5am.

    It’s not peaceful in the cinematic, soft-focus, birds-starting-to-sing kind of way. Not at first.

    It’s more like absence.
    Of noise. Of people. Of identity.

    And for a moment, you meet yourself without anything added.

    There’s a negotiation that happens in that space:

    Why are we awake. Why are we doing this. Who decided this was a good idea.

    But I go anyway.

    I run. I train. I move.

    Alone.

    No notifications. No meetings. No one needing anything. No one performing urgency at me through a screen.

    Just the gym lights. The road. The rhythm of movement.

    And then something shifts.

    Not dramatically. Not emotionally.

    Just… the mind stops resisting being there.

    And in that space, it becomes available.

    The untangling you don’t plan for

    There’s a kind of mental static that builds quietly.

    Not chaos. Not crisis.

    Just accumulation.

    Unfinished thoughts. Conversations replayed too many times. Decisions not fully owned. Questions that stayed open because there was never enough stillness to close them properly.

    And then I run.

    Or train.

    Or move.

    And something simple happens.

    The noise loses structure.

    Not all at once. Not in insight or revelation.

    More like tension leaving a system that no longer needs to hold it.

    A conversation stops repeating itself.

    A decision stops feeling heavy.

    A question stops demanding urgency.

    Not because it’s solved.

    But because I’m no longer standing in relation to it the same way.

    Anxiety doesn’t vanish. It loses authority.

    I don’t want to romanticise this.

    Nothing disappears.

    Stress still exists. Anxiety still exists. Life still exists.

    But in motion, they lose command.

    They stop presenting themselves as truth.

    They become what they actually are: mental weather passing through something that doesn’t need to react to every change in temperature.

    And something in me stops participating.

    I leave it there.

    Not as a decision.

    More as a natural release.

    Like setting something down because I’ve carried it long enough.

    What replaces the noise

    What replaces it is not clarity.

    Not insight.

    Not resolution.

    It’s presence.

    The simplest possible state.

    Unedited. Unperformed. Unexplained.

    There’s curiosity too, but not the kind that interrogates life.

    The kind that allows it to unfold without resistance.

    Less grasping. Less interpreting. Less forcing meaning onto everything.

    Just being there for it.

    The 5am meeting

    It turns out the most honest meeting I have each day isn’t on my calendar.

    It starts at 5am.

    No agenda.

    No slides.

    No performance.

    Just a return.

    Like arriving fully present in mind, body and soul onto a yoga mat, before you begin.

    Like Roark in that moment of stillness before the world asks him to explain himself.

    Like entering cold water before thought has a chance to resist.

    A quiet arrival back into myself before the world asks me to be anything else.

    Not to fix myself.

    Not to prove myself.

    Just to meet myself – properly.

    And somehow, every single time, I leave with exactly what I needed.

    Not answers.

    Just that feeling of being fully back inside my own life again.

  • Confessions of a reluctant runner: How I went from gasping at 1K to loving my 10k runs every morning

    My relationship with running is like a dramatic love story—full of resistance, obsession, and a touch of madness. Some mornings, when my alarm blares at 4:30 am, I lie there thinking, “Absolutely not. This is ridiculous. Who even does this?” But somehow, I drag myself up, lace up my shoes, and start moving. And without fail, every single time, I finish my run feeling invincible.

    The thing is, I never regret a run. Not once. Not ever. In fact, after every run, I morph into this annoyingly enthusiastic person who’s already obsessing about the next one. It’s like running has some sneaky psychological grip on me—one minute I’m groaning, the next I’m plotting my next run like it’s the heist of the century.

    Now, let me make one thing clear: I was never “a runner.” Actually, I spent a solid decade of my life (ages 14 to 24) being a dedicated smoker. Yep. Full-time. My poor lungs deserved an apology letter, a bouquet of flowers, and possibly some therapy. When I finally quit cold turkey at 24, I thought, “Great, now I’ll be healthy!” But the universe laughed. I couldn’t run a single kilometer without feeling like I was auditioning for the role of “person dramatically dying of lung failure” in some B-grade movie.

    Fast forward to today—40 years old, running 10 kilometers, 3-4 times a week, like it’s my part-time job. And here’s the plot twist: I bloody love it.

    Running is like a mental exorcism. All the cobwebs of self-doubt, imposter syndrome, random overthinking (like, “Did I really need to say ‘you too’ when the barista said ‘enjoy your matcha’?”), work stress, life stress—all gone. Cleared. Poof. It’s as if each step is stomping on negativity.

    After every run, I feel like I’ve been handed the reins to my own life again. Like I’m wearing an invisible superhero cape that says, “Come at me, world.” It’s not just exercise; it’s a full-on mental reset button.

    And yet—I’ll say it again—I am not a runner. I just love running.

    It’s wild how something I used to hate (and I mean deep, soul-level hatred) has become one of my favorite ways to start the day. At 4:30 am, no less. Whether it’s pounding the pavement or sweating it out on the treadmill, before I know it, my 10K is done, and my mind feels clearer, my mood lighter, my life… better.

    If you’ve ever thought about running but immediately followed that thought with, “Nah, I’d rather wrestle a cactus,” hear me out: running is magic. Seriously. If I can go from “feels like death after 1K” to “obsessed with running everyday”—literally anyone can.

    So, lace up, give it a shot. Worst case? You’ll hate it. Best case? You’ll fall in love with it—and with how it makes you feel.

    And if you do? Welcome to the complicated, glorious, life-changing world of running. You’ll never look back.