You woke up one morning and found yourself in the land of dwarfs!
Write a paragraph describing your experiences there and how you got back home finally. You may begin like this.
Everything around me looked different.
Answers
Early to bed and early to rise makes a man healthy, wealthy, and wise.”— Benjamin Franklin
For years, I wanted to wake up early. It seems almost all successful people get going before sunrise, and I wanted to be one of them. But when my morning alarm would go off, all the good intentions in the world couldn’t pull me out of bed.
I understood the benefits of waking up early. I made plans to wake up early and write, just like the recent challenge in the 15 Habits series. But that discipline was gone in the morning.
The groggy person hitting the snooze button wasn’t the same clear-thinking person that had set the alarm the night before.
When I realized waking up early is a battle fought on two fronts, everything changed We must prepare our bodies, but we must also trick our sleepy minds.
Here are eight tips to help you win the fight and wake up early:
I remember laughing at the dwarfs of snow white before falling asleep.
When I woke up, I saw a very tiny man standing on my nose talking about how big I am.
I all of a sudden was in such a shock.
Around me were people very short.
All of them were talking about teaching me a lesson on laughing at them.
Then came a small man with white beard.
He said one has to be a dwarf to understand their struggles.
I then felt dizzy.
My hands and legs started shrinking.
And I was a dwarf.
I wanted to run as soon as I had gotten my senses back.
But Alas! My feet were too small for that.
I ran and ran and ran as fast as I could.
Someone was calling my name.
I felt a push.
And I woke up.
My mother asked me to brush teeth and get ready for school.
Snow white was still playing on loop on my laptop.