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What do you wish you could do more every day?

What Else Do You Wish You Could Do Every Day? (That One Thing That Could Change Your Life)

Table of Contents

1. Introduction (Using the ARB Formula)

   · Attention

   · Reason

   · Benefits

2. That Question That Comes to Your Mind the Moment You Wake Up

3. Do We Want to “Do” Something or “Become” Someone?

4. The Walls of Your Comfort Zone: Why Do We Stop?

5. The 5 Things Everyone Wants to Do Every Day (But Doesn’t)

6. How to Get Started (A Practical Roadmap)

7. Conclusion: Today Is Your Day

1. Introduction (ARB Formula)

Attention:

Have you ever woken up in the morning feeling like you’re just “passing time“? Running around all day—office work, household responsibilities, scrolling through your phone, and then crashing into bed at night, exhausted. But just as you’re about to fall asleep, a small voice in your head asks: “Was that it? Could I have done something more today?” You’re not alone. Deep down, every person has a voice that says, “I can do more. I can be more.”

Reason:

You’re reading this article because you’re one of those millions of people who feel like they’re using only 10% of their true potential. You know there’s something greater inside you, but you don’t know how to bring it out—every single day. Today, we’re going to address that gap. We won’t just look at what you should do; we’ll look at what you truly want to do—and why you keep missing the chance to do it.

Benefits:

By the time you finish reading this:

· You’ll be able to identify your deepest, most authentic desires.

· You’ll understand that productivity isn’t about doing more work—it’s about doing the right work.

· The creative, passionate person inside you—the one buried under daily routines—will begin to wake up.

· You’ll learn how to build a routine that doesn’t feel like a burden but actually gives you energy.

2. That Question That Comes to Your Mind the Moment You Wake Up

All our lives are like a story. But most people live the same story, on repeat, like a loop. Whether you’re a student, a homemaker, a professional, or a business owner—everyone carries a deep desire to do “more.”
A student studies every day, but somewhere inside, there’s a dream of becoming a cricketer, or a hidden passion for painting.

A homemaker manages the household beautifully, but there’s a longing to start a blog, open a small bakery, or learn dance.

A professional runs behind promotions at the office, but in their heart, there’s a startup idea they keep postponing with the excuse, “Now is not the right time.”

This question—”What else do you wish you could do every day?” —isn’t an external question. It’s a call from your own soul. It’s your untapped potential knocking on your door, asking to be noticed.

3. Do We Want to “Do” Something or “Become” Someone?

When we ask ourselves this question, we often make a mistake. We think, “I want to exercise for one hour every day” or “I want to learn coding for two hours.” But those are just activities.

If we go deeper, we realize we don’t actually want to do those things. We want to become something.

We don’t want to exercise—we want to become fit and confident.

We don’t want to learn coding—we want to become a successful developer or entrepreneur.

We don’t want to read books—we want to become wise and knowledgeable.

This is where our mind gets confused. We want to become, but we don’t want to do. And when we start doing, we expect instant results.

The formula for success is simple: You become what you do every day. If you spend your day watching Instagram reels, you become a consumer. If you spend it learning or creating something new, you become a creator. The choice is yours.

4. The Walls of Your Comfort Zone: Why Do We Stop?

We have time—24 hours in a day. We have energy. So why can’t we do that “extra” thing we keep dreaming about?

The answer lies in two things: comfort zone and fear of failure.

Your brain is a machine designed to keep you safe. The moment you think, “I’ll wake up at 5 AM and do yoga,” your brain instantly offers you ten excuses:

1. It’s raining today.

2. I slept late last night.

3. Let me just catch up on sleep; I’ll start tomorrow.

This “tomorrow” is the biggest lie we tell ourselves. Tomorrow never comes.

What we need to understand is that people who do that extra thing every day aren’t necessarily more talented than you. They’re just slightly more committed. They’ve made a decision: whether they feel like it or not, whether they’re in the mood or not, they will do that one thing every day.

Your habits shape your identity. If you wake up every day only to watch others succeed, you’ll remain a spectator. But if you spend even 30 minutes a day working toward your own dream, you become a player.

5. The 5 Things Everyone Wants to Do Every Day (But Doesn’t)

Based on years of observation, here are five things that almost every person—regardless of their profession—wishes they could do every day:

1. A Morning Routine: Everyone wants to wake up early. A magical morning, yoga, meditation—it’s a common desire. But the habit of hitting the “snooze” button the moment the alarm goes off is the biggest obstacle.

2. Learning a New Skill: Whether it’s a new language, a musical instrument, or digital marketing—everyone feels, “If I learn this, my value will increase.” But after office and household work, exhaustion leaves no room for learning.

3. Physical Health: Everyone wants to eat healthy and work out. But the temptation of tasty (junk) food and procrastination take over.

4. Managing Finances: Every salaried person and business owner wishes they could plan their finances better and invest wisely. But lack of knowledge and the “let’s look at it next month” attitude hold them back.

5. Quality Time with Family: This is the saddest one. Everyone wants to spend quality time with their children, parents, and loved ones. But our phones and work commitments keep us distant.

6. How to Get Started (A Practical Roadmap

So now the question is: what do we actually do? How do we turn this “I wish” into “I did”?

Step 1: Micro-Commitment (Start Small)


If you’ve decided you’ll go to the gym for two hours every day, you’re setting yourself up for failure. Instead, start with just 10 minutes. Every day, spend just 10 minutes doing what you want to do.

· Want to write? Write 100 words.

· Want to read? Read 5 pages.

· Want to exercise? Do 10 squats.

A small start doesn’t scare your brain. Once you do it consistently for 21 days, your identity shifts. You become the person who does that thing every day.

Step 2: Design Your Environment


If you want to do yoga in the morning, keep your yoga mat next to your bed at night. If you want to read a book, put your phone in another room and place the book on your pillow.

Our environment shapes our habits far more than willpower ever will.

Step 3: The “No-Zero” Day Rule

This is a powerful rule. It means: never let a day be “zero.” Maybe you can’t do a full workout today—do one push-up. Maybe you can’t read a full chapter—read one paragraph. When you ensure that no day goes to waste, your momentum never breaks.

Step 4: Control Your Social Media

The biggest enemy of the “extra” thing you want to do is unlimited scrolling. If you can save just one hour a day from social media, you’ll have that one hour to spend on what truly matters to you.

7. Conclusion: Today Is Your Day

What else do you wish you could do every day? You already know the answer. I’m just a medium. The voice inside you already knows.

You don’t have to change everything in one day. But you do have to start today. You don’t lack time—you lack focus.

When you do that one thing every day—the thing that moves you closer to your dream—it slowly becomes a habit. And when your habits change, your life changes.

It’s time to stop dreaming about “tomorrow” and start living today. This article isn’t just words; it’s a wake-up call.

What will you do today—that extra thing—that your future self will thank you for?

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Thank You!

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