Latest Stories
Most recently published stories in Motivation.
7 Things Successful People Do Before 8 AM
WHY MORNINGS MATTER MORE THAN YOU THINK The hours between five and eight in the morning represent the highest leverage time in your day because your willpower is at its peak, distractions are minimal, and the decisions you make during this window set the trajectory for everything that follows, and research consistently shows that people who establish structured morning routines outperform their peers across virtually every measurable dimension including career advancement, physical health, mental wellbeing, relationship quality, and financial success. This is not about being a morning person versus a night owl, because morning routine benefits come not from some magical property of early hours but from the practical reality that mornings are the only time most people can consistently control, before the demands of work, family, and the world begin consuming your time and energy and pushing your priorities to the margins.
By The Curious Writer4 days ago in Motivation
Breaking Barriers in Women’s Health: The Global Mission of Dr. Elham Neisani Samani
In a world where access to quality healthcare remains uneven, the role of physicians is evolving beyond clinical practice. Today, the most impactful leaders in medicine are those who combine scientific expertise with a deep commitment to social change. Dr. Elham Neisani Samani exemplifies this new generation of healthcare leaders—bridging the gap between research, patient care, and global advocacy.
By ORM_Specialist4 days ago in Motivation
Where it Started
I remember sitting at a small round table, just enough room to fit a family of four around, it was a tan color. It was bright and noisy, and the table was mine tonight, with piles of markers and papers everywhere. My parents were in the kitchen, and although I do not remember where my sister was, I always imagine her sitting across from. I was young yet, maybe six, it couldn’t have been more than that with both my parents in the house.
By Brier4 days ago in Motivation
She Turned Her Laptop Into a Money Machine
At 22, Maya sat cross-legged on her bed, staring at a flickering laptop that overheated every hour. The fan made a grinding noise, the keyboard had missing keys, and the battery only worked when plugged in at a precise angle.
By MIGrowth4 days ago in Motivation
And I would
That morning, getting out of bed felt like climbing a mountain. After stopping Mounjaro, I was still terrified of medication—afraid of the side effects, afraid I would always feel sick, afraid my life would consist of constantly being afraid and crying every time I needed to eat and take my medication.
By Monica Casarez4 days ago in Motivation
7 Reasons Your Goals Aren't Working
We had three months to work on our New Year's resolutions, and it's now finally spring. Time to see how our goals have held up so far. If you're honest with yourself, you've probably either dropped yours somewhere along the way or you're still in there fighting but not quite feeling it. I've done both, and I'm determined to make it right this time. Spring feels like the perfect moment for that. New life, new beginnings, so let's use it.
By Krisztina Kiss5 days ago in Motivation
Utilitarianism in Everyday Decision Making
Utilitarianism is a moral theory central to human decision-making. It suggests the right action is one that produces the greatest good for the largest number of people. While rooted in philosophy, utilitarianism has practical implications for everyday life, shaping how people manage conflict, spend money, care for others, and choose careers.
By Adithan Arunachalam5 days ago in Motivation
Before You Blame Yourself, Read This
A lot of people call themselves lazy when what they really are is worn down. Not dramatic, movie-scene exhaustion. Not the kind that makes everything stop all at once. I mean the quieter kind of depletion that follows you through ordinary days. The kind that makes simple tasks feel heavier than they should. The kind that turns routines into effort, effort into delay, and delay into self-blame.
By Edward Smith5 days ago in Motivation
The Man Who Conquered the Atlantic: Poon Lim’s 133 Days of Absolute Isolation
Imagine the concept of being alone. For most of us, being alone means sitting in a quiet room, taking a walk through an empty park, or turning off our phones for the weekend. We experience isolation in small, controllable doses. We always know that if we panic, if we get hungry, or if we change our minds, civilization is just a few footsteps or a phone call away.
By Frank Massey 5 days ago in Motivation








