Have you ever noticed how your mornings set the tone for everything that follows? The moment you wake up, before your feet even hit the floor, your brain is already scanning for cues about what kind of day it’s going to be. And here’s the truth: what you tell your brain, your brain will look for.
That means if you wake up thinking, Ugh, this is going to be a hard day, your brain will search for every piece of evidence to confirm it. If you start the day with, I’m choosing peace today, your brain will find moments to validate that choice.
Your mindset is like a compass—point it in one direction, and your day will naturally start aligning with it. The question is, are you pointing it toward chaos or calm? Toward frustration or gratitude? Toward fear or courage?
Your Brain Believes What You Feed It
Here’s what’s fascinating: our brains are designed with something called the reticular activating system (RAS). It acts like a filter, deciding what gets your attention. When you tell your brain to focus on something—whether consciously or unconsciously—it scans your environment to find it.
Think of it like when you buy a new car, and suddenly you start seeing that same make and model everywhere. It’s not that the cars weren’t there before—it’s that your brain is now wired to notice them.
Your thoughts work the same way.
If you tell yourself, This meeting is going to be a disaster, your brain will notice every sigh, every side-eye, and every awkward silence. If you tell yourself, I can handle this with grace, your brain will pick up on the support, the nods, the opportunities to speak with confidence.
This is why starting your day with intentional thoughts is so powerful. Your brain is always listening.
The Power of Morning Scripts
The way you script your morning can shift everything. Here are some examples:
- Instead of: Today’s going to be so stressful.
Try: Today I’m choosing peace, no matter what comes my way. - Instead of: I’m so tired, this day is going to drag.
Try: I have enough energy to handle what matters most today. - Instead of: Nobody respects me at work.
Try: I respect myself, and I show up in a way that earns respect.
These aren’t empty affirmations. They are instructions for your brain. And when your brain has instructions, it follows them.
Frustration, Stress, and the Choice We Overlook
Life is going to throw things at you—that’s not optional. Someone cuts you off in traffic, a coworker sends a passive-aggressive email, your plans get derailed.
But here’s the key: those external things don’t decide the quality of your day. You do.
The outside world can invite you to be upset, but you are the one who accepts or declines that invitation.
When you catch yourself spiraling into negativity, pause and ask:
What did I just tell my brain about this moment? Did I tell it to look for the worst, or did I give it something else to notice?
It’s in those pauses that power lives.
Rewiring Takes Practice
If you’ve spent years waking up dreading the day or rehearsing worst-case scenarios, it’s going to take practice to redirect that thought pattern. And that’s okay.
Every time you catch yourself choosing the old script—This is going to be awful—and instead replace it with a new one—I’ve handled worse, and I will handle this too—you are literally rewiring your brain.
The more you do it, the easier it gets. Eventually, your default setting changes. Instead of your brain scanning for stress, it starts scanning for strength. Instead of looking for failure, it starts looking for possibility.
Tell Your Brain Where to Go
Think of your brain like a GPS. If you program it with the wrong address, you’ll end up somewhere you don’t want to be. But when you give it the right directions, it will get you closer to where you want to go.
So before you argue with someone, before you step into that meeting, before you check your email—set the address.
Tell your brain:
- I’m going to stay calm.
- I’m going to choose compassion.
- I’m going to focus on solutions, not problems.
And watch how your day reroutes to align with it.
SLAY Reflection
- What’s the first thought you usually have when you wake up? Does it serve you or sabotage you?
- How often do you give your brain negative instructions without realizing it?
- What would it feel like to intentionally start your day with a thought that empowers you?
- When was the last time you caught yourself spiraling, and what did you do to redirect it?
- What’s one phrase you can start telling yourself tomorrow morning to shift your entire day?
S – Script your mornings with intentional thoughts
L – Let your brain look for evidence that supports your peace
A – Align your mindset with the day you want to create
Y – Yield to positivity and refuse to accept the invitation to chaos
Call to Action: Join the Conversation
I’d love to hear from you.
What’s the phrase you tell yourself that shifts the entire direction of your day?
Share your story in the comments. Let’s cheer each other on.
And if you know someone who’s stuck in negative loops, send this to them.
Sometimes, all we need is a reminder that our brains believe what we tell them.