Let me paint you a picture of what I thought was my "perfect" wellness routine: Wake up at 5 AM, meditate for an hour, green smoothie, hour-long workout, journaling, cold shower... all before starting my workday. Sounds amazing, right?
Want to know how long that lasted? Three days. And I spent two of them feeling guilty about how much I hated every minute of it.
Here's the thing about wellness that Instagram doesn't show you: It looks different on everyone. And sometimes, the "perfect" routine is the exact thing standing in the way of actually feeling well.
I remember the moment this really hit home. I was at a coffee shop, beating myself up for sleeping through my morning routine, when I overheard two women talking. One was listing all her wellness practices - pretty much everything I'd been failing at. The other simply said, "That would make me miserable. I feel my best when I take evening walks with my dog and read in bed."
Mind. Blown.
Why had I never considered that wellness isn't one-size-fits-all? That maybe, just maybe, the key to feeling good isn't following someone else's blueprint?
So I started an experiment. Instead of forcing myself into this rigid idea of what wellness "should" look like, I began paying attention to what actually made me feel good. Not what looked good on paper or would make a great social media post - but what made me feel genuinely well.
Here's what I discovered:
Those 5 AM wake-ups? Turns out I'm actually most energized when I wake up naturally around 7. Meditation is great - but for me, it works better as short breaks throughout the day rather than one long morning session. My body feels better with afternoon workouts, even though every influencer swears by morning exercise. Sometimes, wellness looks like ordering takeout because I need the mental space more than I need a home-cooked meal.
The real breakthrough came when I stopped seeing wellness as this all-or-nothing game. You know what legitimate wellness looks like some days? It's choosing sleep over a workout. It's having ice cream AND a green smoothie. It's setting boundaries with that energy-draining friend. It's admitting you need help.
Let me share my biggest wellness plot twist: The days I feel most "well" often have nothing to do with all the things I'm "supposed" to do. Instead, they're the days when I:
Listen to my body instead of my schedule
Choose what feels right over what looks right
Give myself permission to change my mind
Treat myself with the same kindness I'd show a friend
Here's what I want you to take away from this: Your wellness journey is yours alone. Those picture-perfect routines you see online? They're highlight reels, not the full story. Real wellness is messy, flexible, and sometimes looks like taking a nap instead of crushing goals.
I've learned that true wellness isn't about perfection - it's about connection. Connection with yourself, your body, your needs, and yes, even your limitations.
So I'm curious - what's one "wellness rule" you've broken that actually made you feel better? What does real wellness look like in your wonderfully imperfect life? Share your story below - let's start being real about what makes us truly well.
Until next time, Dr. Christopher Paul
P.S. Next week, we're talking about connections - and why the "network till you make it" approach might be doing more harm than good. Trust me, as a recovering networking-event-hater, you won't want to miss this one.
Let me paint you a picture of what I thought was my "perfect" wellness routine: Wake up at 5 AM, meditate for an hour, green smoothie, hour-long workout, journaling, cold shower... all before starting my workday. Sounds amazing, right?
Want to know how long that lasted? Three days. And I spent two of them feeling guilty about how much I hated every minute of it.
Here's the thing about wellness that Instagram doesn't show you: It looks different on everyone. And sometimes, the "perfect" routine is the exact thing standing in the way of actually feeling well.
I remember the moment this really hit home. I was at a coffee shop, beating myself up for sleeping through my morning routine, when I overheard two women talking. One was listing all her wellness practices - pretty much everything I'd been failing at. The other simply said, "That would make me miserable. I feel my best when I take evening walks with my dog and read in bed."
Mind. Blown.
Why had I never considered that wellness isn't one-size-fits-all? That maybe, just maybe, the key to feeling good isn't following someone else's blueprint?
So I started an experiment. Instead of forcing myself into this rigid idea of what wellness "should" look like, I began paying attention to what actually made me feel good. Not what looked good on paper or would make a great social media post - but what made me feel genuinely well.
Here's what I discovered:
Those 5 AM wake-ups? Turns out I'm actually most energized when I wake up naturally around 7. Meditation is great - but for me, it works better as short breaks throughout the day rather than one long morning session. My body feels better with afternoon workouts, even though every influencer swears by morning exercise. Sometimes, wellness looks like ordering takeout because I need the mental space more than I need a home-cooked meal.
The real breakthrough came when I stopped seeing wellness as this all-or-nothing game. You know what legitimate wellness looks like some days? It's choosing sleep over a workout. It's having ice cream AND a green smoothie. It's setting boundaries with that energy-draining friend. It's admitting you need help.
Let me share my biggest wellness plot twist: The days I feel most "well" often have nothing to do with all the things I'm "supposed" to do. Instead, they're the days when I:
Listen to my body instead of my schedule
Choose what feels right over what looks right
Give myself permission to change my mind
Treat myself with the same kindness I'd show a friend
Here's what I want you to take away from this: Your wellness journey is yours alone. Those picture-perfect routines you see online? They're highlight reels, not the full story. Real wellness is messy, flexible, and sometimes looks like taking a nap instead of crushing goals.
I've learned that true wellness isn't about perfection - it's about connection. Connection with yourself, your body, your needs, and yes, even your limitations.
So I'm curious - what's one "wellness rule" you've broken that actually made you feel better? What does real wellness look like in your wonderfully imperfect life? Share your story below - let's start being real about what makes us truly well.
Until next time, Dr. Christopher Paul
P.S. Next week, we're talking about connections - and why the "network till you make it" approach might be doing more harm than good. Trust me, as a recovering networking-event-hater, you won't want to miss this one.
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"I feel on top of the world—motivated, empowered, and truly the master of my own destiny. Christopher's coaching has been transformative for both me and Southern Seas."
— Tanya Carothers, Owner of Southern Seas
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