“That’s one of the things I’ve learned using the #5SecondRule. When it comes to goals, dreams, and changing your life, your inner wisdom is a genius. Your goal-related impulses, urges, and instincts are there to guide you. You need to learn to bet on them. Because, as history proves, you’ll never know when your greatest inspiration will strike and where that discovery will lead you if you trust yourself enough to act on it.
This is how some of the world’s most useful inventions were discovered. In 1826, John Walker discovered the match while he was using a stick to stir a pot of chemicals, and when he tried to scrape the gob off the end—it ignited. He followed his instinct to try to recreate it and this is how he discovered the match. In 1941, George de Mestral invented Velcro after noticing how easily cockleburs attached to his dog’s fur. In 1974, Art Fry got the idea for Post-It Note because he needed a bookmark that would stay put on a page in his hymnal until Sunday’s church service, but that would not damage the pages when he removed it.
That’s even how the Frappuccino was born. In 1992, an assistant manager at a Starbucks in Santa Monica noticed that sales dropped whenever it was hot outside. He had an instinct to make a frozen drink and he followed it, asking for a blender, tinkering with recipes, and giving a Vice President a sample. The first Frappuccino rolled out in his store a year later.
When it comes to change, goals, and dreams, you have to bet on yourself. That bet starts with hearing the instinct to change and honoring that instinct with action. I feel so thankful that I listened to that dumb idea about launching myself out of bed like a rocket because everything in my life changed as a result of it. Here’s what happened:
The next morning the alarm clock rang at 6 a.m. and the first thing I felt was dread. It was dark. It was cold. It was winter in Boston and I did not want to wake up. I thought about the rocket launch and I immediately felt like it was stupid. Then, I did something I had never done before—I ignored how I felt. I didn’t think. I did what needed to be done.
Instead of hitting the snooze button, I started counting.
Backwards.
5..4..3..2..1..
And then I stood up.
That was the moment I discovered the #5SecondRule.”
Welcome to the 5 Second Rule.
Let’s start with a little origin story.
Many moons ago, Mel wasn’t feeling so great. She’s 41. Unhappy in her marriage. Struggling with finances. Drinking a little too much. She dreaded getting out of bed so much that she’d hit the snooze button so many times that her kids often missed the school bus.
Then one night she’s about to turn off the TV before going to bed when she sees a commercial that ends with the famous final five-second launch countdown.
5… 4… 3… 2… 1… BLASTOFF!
She thought to herself, “That’s it. I’ll launch myself out of bed tomorrow… like a rocket. I’ll move so fast that I won’t have time to talk myself out of it.”
She says that it was “just an instinct. One that I could have easily dismissed. Luckily, I didn’t. I acted on it.”
Enter: The 5 Second Rule.
Defined as: “The moment you have an instinct to act on a goal, you must 5-4-3-2-1 and physically move or your brain will stop you.”
You have an instinct to act on a goal?
TRUST IT.
Don’t hesitate.
Initiate the final countdown launch and rocket yourself into action!
5-4-3-2-1-GO!
I’ve been playing with it and I’ve gotta say: It’s a pretty epic way to close that gap between who you’re CAPABLE of being and who you’re ACTUALLY being.
You know those two lines we draw all the time? The one at the top representing who you’re CAPABLE of being and the one below it representing who you’re ACTUALLY being?
Well, imagine yourself at that bottom line going through your day.
Then you get an “instinct to act on a goal” (whether that’s picking up a piece of laundry so you can have a clean house or sitting down to do some Deep Work so you can hit your creative goals).
Then what?
Then initiate the 5 Second Rule. 5-4-3-2-1-GO!
Imagine strapping on a jet pack and launching yourself from the lower line to the line above it.
I’m laughing as I type that but I must say that this might just be the most elegantly fun way to operationalize areté we’ve discovered so far!
If you feel so inspired, try it out today the next time you have an instinct to act on a goal!
5-4-3-2-1-GO!