This article is from the source 'guardian' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.

You can find the current article at its original source at http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/shortcuts/2012/sep/17/barack-obama-secret-weapon-routine

The article has changed 6 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.

Version 3 Version 4
Barack Obama's secret weapon? Routine Barack Obama's secret weapon? Routine
(8 days later)
In order to manage the challenge of being president of the United States, Barack Obama hits the gym at 7:30 on the dot every morning, and wears only blue or grey suits in order to cut down on non-vital decisions. "You need to focus your decision-making energy," he told Vanity Fair. "You need to routinize yourself."In order to manage the challenge of being president of the United States, Barack Obama hits the gym at 7:30 on the dot every morning, and wears only blue or grey suits in order to cut down on non-vital decisions. "You need to focus your decision-making energy," he told Vanity Fair. "You need to routinize yourself."
You can see it makes sense, this routinising, but it's not easy. The trouble with a routine is you have to keep doing it, and my own efforts to routinise my existence have come to nothing. I go to the gym even earlier than Obama – I'm there at 7 – but I don't go every day, and I keep switching days. When I don't go I get up two hours later.You can see it makes sense, this routinising, but it's not easy. The trouble with a routine is you have to keep doing it, and my own efforts to routinise my existence have come to nothing. I go to the gym even earlier than Obama – I'm there at 7 – but I don't go every day, and I keep switching days. When I don't go I get up two hours later.
Although we both work from home, my commute is shorter than Obama's: his is 70 yards, and includes a ride in a lift; mine is just nine yards, incorporating half a flight of stairs. My wardrobe decisions do not spring from having a vast wardrobe, but that doesn't make them any less perplexing: dress now, dress later, or play it by ear? I also have twice the sock choices of most people, because there's no need for me to wear matching ones. I do try to wear the same trousers every day for at least a week, on the grounds that all my important stuff (keys, phone, money, scraps of paper, dog waste sacks) is already in the pockets. I can't waste time decanting my life into fresh trousers; I've already wasted that time elsewhere.Although we both work from home, my commute is shorter than Obama's: his is 70 yards, and includes a ride in a lift; mine is just nine yards, incorporating half a flight of stairs. My wardrobe decisions do not spring from having a vast wardrobe, but that doesn't make them any less perplexing: dress now, dress later, or play it by ear? I also have twice the sock choices of most people, because there's no need for me to wear matching ones. I do try to wear the same trousers every day for at least a week, on the grounds that all my important stuff (keys, phone, money, scraps of paper, dog waste sacks) is already in the pockets. I can't waste time decanting my life into fresh trousers; I've already wasted that time elsewhere.
There is some semblance of order to the day – coffee, feed cat, do sudoku, walk dogs, embark on work avoidance subroutine one, more coffee – but I am beset by an inability to prioritise decisions. I can, and will, spend an hour trying to decide whether or I should spell it "routinize" or "routinise" – the latter seems more proper, but then it's not really my word to mess with – before deciding that it's somebody else's decision.There is some semblance of order to the day – coffee, feed cat, do sudoku, walk dogs, embark on work avoidance subroutine one, more coffee – but I am beset by an inability to prioritise decisions. I can, and will, spend an hour trying to decide whether or I should spell it "routinize" or "routinise" – the latter seems more proper, but then it's not really my word to mess with – before deciding that it's somebody else's decision.
A copy deadline is usually the only roadblock in my day, and I generally come up against it with some force. After that I only have to decide which emails not to return – it's normally all of them – until eventually it comes time to choose between wine and beer. I usually set aside an hour in the evening to worry about all that I have failed to achieve.A copy deadline is usually the only roadblock in my day, and I generally come up against it with some force. After that I only have to decide which emails not to return – it's normally all of them – until eventually it comes time to choose between wine and beer. I usually set aside an hour in the evening to worry about all that I have failed to achieve.
I need to get more presidential about my decision-making. If only I had one overriding responsibility – like a button that triggered nuclear armageddon, say – it might help to concentrate the mind.I need to get more presidential about my decision-making. If only I had one overriding responsibility – like a button that triggered nuclear armageddon, say – it might help to concentrate the mind.
Our editors' picks for the day's top news and commentary delivered to your inbox each morning.Our editors' picks for the day's top news and commentary delivered to your inbox each morning.
Our editors' picks for the day's top news and commentary delivered to your inbox each morning. Enter your email address to subscribe.Our editors' picks for the day's top news and commentary delivered to your inbox each morning. Enter your email address to subscribe.
Our editors' picks for the day's top news and commentary delivered to your inbox each morning. Our editors' picks for the day's top news and commentary delivered to your inbox every weekday.