Stardate 02.03.2026
There’s a song that plays quietly in the background of my mornings—not on a speaker, but in spirit.
Domo arigato, Mr. Roboto.
Not as a warning about becoming less human, but as a thank-you for the routines that help me live more fully human.
The older I get, the more I realize how much energy gets wasted on preparation. Decisions before the day even begins. What to wear. What to take. When to go. By the time some people start their day, they’re already exhausted from choosing.
So I’ve chosen not to choose.
I wake up without an alarm clock now. Somewhere along the way, my body found its own rhythm. That alone feels like grace. No jolt. No scramble. Just awareness.
My clothes are already laid out. Yesterday’s version of me took care of today’s version of me—and I’m grateful for that small act of kindness.
My supplement stack is already waiting on the dining room table. No cabinets to open. No decisions to make. Just a steady handoff from habit to health.
When I turn on the shower, I don’t wait for comfort. I step in immediately, even when the water is brutally cold for that first minute. Especially then. That shock wakes something up inside me—endorphins released, clarity restored, courage practiced early. The discomfort pays dividends for hours.
And on workdays, I leave the house at exactly 8:08 AM.
Not 8:07. Not 8:10.
8:08.
These routines may look rigid from the outside, but they’ve done the opposite inside me. They’ve created space. Space to think. Space to pray. Space to notice what actually matters.
Scripture reminds us:
“Let all things be done decently and in order.”
— 1 Corinthians 14:40
Order doesn’t remove wonder. It makes room for it.
The song Mr. Roboto plays with the fear of losing ourselves to automation. I get that. But I’ve found that when routine serves intention—and intention serves love—structure becomes a servant, not a master.
Domo arigato, Mr. Roboto.
Thank you for handling the small things
so I can stay present for the important ones.
Captain’s Addendum
Bones: “Michael, you’re tellin’ me you jump into an ice-cold shower on purpose?”
Spock: “Doctor, the captain appears to value long-term benefit over short-term comfort. A most… logical adaptation.”
Bones: “I liked him better when he complained.”
Michael’s Reflection:
What I’m learning is this: discipline isn’t about becoming mechanical—it’s about becoming dependable. When my mornings run on rails, my heart is free to wander where it’s needed most.
Join me here:
https://substack.com/@michaelmulliganlivelong

