Most meditation teachers agree that daily practice brings about the best results, but almost every meditator I know struggles with daily consistency. I definitely did. When the time came to sit, I’d usually feel the urge to skip it or put it off, which was totally irrational because I knew that meditating made me feel great. It took six years of trying and failing before I finally locked down a daily practice. Here are the two tricks that solved it for me:

1. The Clever Trick

I use this trick whenever I feel the dreaded resistance to doing my morning sit, that visceral urge to skip it or do it “later” (i.e., never). The trick is:

I just shrink the length of the session in my head until I hit a level I don’t feel resistance to.

Like, “Could I do 15 minutes? No, I feel resistance, I’m not gonna do it. Okay, what about 10? Still too long, the thought puts me off. Okay, five? Huh, I don’t feel resistance to that. I feel like I can sit for five.” Boom.

Then, if my session ends and I feel like sitting longer, I do.

2. The Better Trick

That first trick helps me bust through the resistance to meditating that can sometimes arise. But my favorite trick (actually more of a rule) keeps resistance from even coming up, which is better. The rule:

I wake up at a set time every morning and immediately meditate, before doing anything else.

If I do anything else first — breakfast, a workout, checking my phone — I have trouble getting myself to sit. Actually, I’ll go further: putting off the morning sit almost guarantees that I won’t sit at all. So there’s a second part to this trick: admitting to myself that “I’ll sit later” is code for “I’m skipping my sit today.” Once I owned up to that, meditating daily became almost effortless. I just stopped believing my own “I’ll sit later” B.S. and committed to sitting first thing in the morning, when I’d actually do it.

Why Is Sitting Later in the Day So Hard?

I’m not sure, but I have a theory:

From the moment we get out of bed, we’re in constant motion — washing up, picking out clothes, checking email, shoving breakfast in our faces, rushing to work, checking five different things on our phones, getting to the office, starting work… just going. I think this constant motion creates a momentum in our minds that’s hard to stop, like a flywheel that’s been revved up to high speed. Every task, every conversation, every glance at email or Instagram spins the flywheel faster.

Getting yourself to meditate once you’ve started your day is hard because you’re fighting all that momentum. After hours of doing stuff, you’re trying to suddenly hit the brakes and do nothing. But if you sit as soon as you wake up, you avoid the problem. You get your session in before the flywheel starts spinning.