If your days start with good intentions and end with a messy to-do list, the problem is rarely effort. It is that the day gets decided in fragments: a message here, a meeting there, a quick request that turns into an hour. The Morning Map gives you a short, repeatable way to choose your direction before the noise takes over, using a realistic morning practice that fits unpredictable schedules. This is a practical guide to morning routine planning that helps you turn scattered inputs into clear daily priorities, then convert those priorities into a workable plan using a time blocking method that can survive real life. Priya Dhanvel shows you how to do task sequencing so work flows instead of stalls, how to plan around your actual energy management patterns, and how to use contingency planning so one surprise does not erase the whole day. You will also learn humane interruption control: response windows, quick capture, and simple scripts that protect focus without damaging relationships. The Morning Map is for anyone who wants more follow-through without becoming rigid: professionals in high-communication roles, creatives who need protected focus, managers balancing deep work with availability, and people coordinating family and work. The aim is not a perfect schedule. It is a dependable decision point each morning, plus a light weekly review habit that keeps your system honest. You will finish with a clearer sense of what must be done today, what can wait, what should be removed, and how to keep moving even when the day does not go to plan.
The Morning Map
SKU: 9789377788100
$22.99 Regular Price
$18.66Sale Price
- Priya Dhanvel writes about practical self-management for people living in real-world complexity: shifting schedules, shared responsibilities, noisy communication, and work that rarely comes in neat packages. Her perspective is grounded in the daily craft of choosing what to do next when everything feels important, and in the belief that calm is not a personality trait but a practice you can design. She is especially interested in small rituals that create disproportionate clarity, and in tools that respect human limits rather than pretending we can operate like machines. Her work has been shaped by conversations with busy colleagues, friends, and family members who juggle multiple roles and still want to make steady progress on what matters to them. She values simple language, honest constraints, and methods you can use on an ordinary Tuesday, not just in a perfect week. A quiet cultural thread runs through her approach: the long tradition of beginning the day with intention, whether through journalling, prayer, or preparing a home before the outside world arrives. Across places and generations, people have used mornings to set direction when life felt uncertain. Priya brings that same spirit into contemporary planning: short, repeatable steps that help you show up with purpose, protect your attention, and follow through without burning out.


















