@thegodofwood_

This is why I quit waking up, too many sweats

@David-pz4gy

Screw hours, I configured my clock to show the % of day that has passed

@AmandeepTSingh

Making every single day feel like 2 days is so real

@Mr.Landin

Unironically this video helped me go to bed on time and get up at 4:30am for the past 2 weeks. 10/10 would recommend. The point about not losing any time by interrupting what you are doing with going to bed really helped. Noone bothers you at 4:30am, so it's great for getting tasks done, schedulng emails to send for the start of the work day, praying in solitude, and in general just being more prepared for the day. Thanks easy, actually.

@CubeHeadd

I genuinely can't tell if this is real, good advice, or amazingly good satire

@SecondAccount-y4h

This is a genius way to catch attention. I think the guy scheduled the video to be published at 1:00 a.m. for those who are awake at that time. Smart! And then people will click it because they’re awake and subconsciously feel like they need it, leading them to engage with the video. This makes the viewer click it, boosting its relevance even more.

@raindow92

I added doing 10000 pushups after my alarm. thanks i am now a 7'1 billionare athlete

@sobbert

4:53 ah yes the 430 am bright sky

@Dilan-f5r9w

This video reminded me of what Dr. Samuel Royce covers in The Science of Lasting Health — waking up early isn’t about “willpower,” it’s about syncing with your natural hormone cycles. Great insights in that book!

@Derpinshnofe

I like to consider myself a bit of an expert on this from personal experience since I work in a bakery. 
1. I regularly wake up at 3am for my job 
2. I used to work hours that ended up with 4 hours before and after work
3. Most of my colleagues work similar hours

A lot of people think it’s super admirable but I’d never recommend anyone willingly wake up that early. It has time and time again caused depression because you often don’t see the sun until you’re a couple hours from going to bed.  It’s extremely isolating since I often can’t share dinner with friends or family. Spending 12+ hours in basically work mode isn’t admirable, it can be extremely draining for most people. That’s why most of my coworkers choose positions where they can at least see the sunrise on the way to work. 

I also did not enjoy the position where I had time before and after. It’s a position no long term people like either. It feels like you’re always on a timer. 

Plus, waking up at 3 am has not made me a millionaire yet 😅

I’m sure it works for some people but don’t worry if you have the sleep schedule of a human and not a machine

@PsycheTrance65

learning how to understand the 24-hour clock is easy, actually

@vineal101

> waking up at 4:30 am 
> posts video at 1:00 am

hmm

@extrabreezyday5543

Bro posting this at 1am is crazy

@nezu_cc

It's 4:45 and I'm about to go to sleep. Am I doing this right?

@awakenedwalker

Discipline isn't just about waking up early—it's about building a mindset where you see the morning as an opportunity, not a challenge. The 4:30 a.m. wake-up time might sound extreme, but if you treat it as a step toward your bigger goals, it's not just about gaining more time—it's about prioritizing what truly matters. That early quiet is where clarity often strikes.

@Paragon_CS

The advice with only 1 alarm is actually genius. I used to have more and its true that I would press snooze cuz I knew there would be another timer. Gonna try this new approach now

@slyceth

It's fun until you want to go anywhere like a concert that starts at 7 pm and ends at midnight and your schedule is ruined

@41r39

We are at a time when you are not really sure if it’s a joke that 24-h is hard for americans or not

@cobble616

4:54 
>wake up at 4:30

>look at the bright sky 

>this is possible

@anddmann2304

Need a “picking a major in college/ career is easy actually” video 🙏