So… these 5 Soul Path Daily Practices for Personal Growth (and how I almost ignored all of them)
I didn’t wake up one day thinking, “Ah yes, today I shall begin my 5 soul path daily practices for personal growth journey.”
Nope.
I woke up late, checked my phone, panicked about emails, and somehow ended up watching a video about raccoons stealing snacks.
You ever have mornings like that?
Where you’re technically awake… but not alive yet?
Yeah. That was me. For a while.
And then—slowly, awkwardly—I started trying these little daily practices. Not perfectly. Not consistently. But enough to notice something shift.
Not a huge glow-up.
More like… a quiet upgrade.
The Problem With “Personal Growth” (Nobody Says This Part Out Loud)
Quick rant.
A lot of personal growth advice feels like it was written by someone who has their life together at 5 AM.
They’re like:
“Just wake up early, meditate, journal, drink green juice, and align your soul.”
Meanwhile I’m over here like:
“I haven’t even brushed my teeth yet.”
So if you’re expecting perfection—this ain’t that.
These are real-life, slightly messy, kinda imperfect daily practices that actually help.

Practice #1: The 5-Minute “Check-In With Myself” Thing
This one sounds simple.
Because it is.
And yet… I ignored it for way too long.
Every morning (or afternoon, or whenever I remember), I ask myself:
- “How am I actually feeling?”
- “What do I need today?”
- “What’s one thing that matters?”
That’s it.
No journaling marathon. No deep spiritual breakthrough.
Just a quick pause.
I picked this up after reading about mindfulness from teachers like Thich Nhat Hanh, who emphasized awareness over complexity.
And honestly?
Half the time my answer is:
“I’m tired and I want snacks.”
But hey—at least I’m aware now.
Practice #2: Start Before You Feel Ready (This One Hurts a Little)
I used to wait until I felt “in the mood.”
For writing. For working.
And guess what?
That mood rarely showed up.
So now I do this weird thing where I just… start.
Badly.
Messy sentences. Half thoughts. No structure.
It’s like telling my brain:
“Relax. We’re just trying this.”
This connects to something even Eckhart Tolle talks about—being present with what is, not waiting for some perfect state.
Do I still procrastinate?
Oh absolutely.
But less dramatically now.
Practice #3: The “Notice What Drains Me” Game
Okay this one surprised me.
I always focused on what I should do.
More habits. More goals.
But no one told me to look at what’s draining my energy.
So I started noticing:
- Endless scrolling → drained
- Overthinking conversations → drained
- Saying yes to things I didn’t want → VERY drained
And suddenly, personal growth wasn’t about adding more…
It was about removing stuff.
Which, honestly, felt like cheating. But in a good way.
Practice #4: Do One Small Thing That Feels Meaningful
Not productive. Not impressive.
Just… meaningful.
Some days that looks like:
- Writing something honest
- Checking in on a friend
- Sitting quietly for a few minutes
And yeah, it sounds basic.
But even people like Dalai Lama emphasize simple acts of awareness and kindness over big, dramatic changes.
One small thing a day.
That’s it.
Not ten. Not a life overhaul.
Just one.
Practice #5: Let the Day Be Imperfect (This One Is Hard, Not Gonna Lie)
I used to treat bad days like failures.
Like if I didn’t follow my routine perfectly, the whole day was ruined.
Which is… dramatic.
Now I try to do this instead:
- Mess up
- Notice it
- Move on
No spiraling. No “I’ll start again next week.”
Just… continue.
I think this might be the most important part of these 5 soul path daily practices for personal growth.
Because life isn’t consistent.
Why would your growth be?
A Random Story (Because This Explains Everything Somehow)
A few weeks ago, I had a “perfect day” planned.
Wake up early. Work out. Be productive. Eat healthy.
You know… the whole Pinterest lifestyle.
Instead?

- I woke up late
- Skipped the workout
- Ate something questionable for breakfast
- Got distracted half the day
Old me would’ve been like:
“Well, this day is ruined.”
New-ish me?
I did one small thing that mattered.
Just one.
And weirdly… the day didn’t feel like a failure.
That’s when it clicked—
These practices aren’t about perfection.
They’re about direction.
Real Talk: You’re Gonna Forget These (I Do All the Time)
I wish I could say I follow these daily.
I don’t.
Some days I completely forget everything and just exist in chaos.
Other days I remember one or two.
And that’s enough.
Because consistency isn’t about doing everything perfectly.
It’s about coming back.
Again and again.
Stuff That Helped Me (You Might Like It Too)
- Mark Manson (https://markmanson.net) — brutally honest, kinda sarcastic, very real
- The Marginalian (https://www.themarginalian.org) — deeper, slower, thoughtful
Warning: both can make you question your life in unexpected ways.
