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10 things successful people always do in their free time, according to psychology

What successful people do when no one’s watching matters just as much as what they do at work. Here are 10 free-time habits that quietly build focus, energy, and long-term success—backed by psychology.

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What successful people do when no one’s watching matters just as much as what they do at work. Here are 10 free-time habits that quietly build focus, energy, and long-term success—backed by psychology.

Ever notice how some people seem to squeeze extra hours out of the day? When you look closely, it’s not because they work every second—they use their down‑time differently.

Psychology research shows that what we choose to do between Zoom calls, after dinner, or on a lazy Sunday shapes our energy, focus, and even long‑term success.

Below are ten low‑key habits that high performers sneak into their free time. They aren’t flashy. Most cost nothing. But stack them together and you get a compounding edge that shows up at work, in relationships, and in overall life satisfaction.

1. They move their bodies—hard enough to sweat

Successful people treat exercise like brushing their teeth: non‑negotiable. A 2024 University of California Santa Barbara review found that short bursts of cycling or HIIT sharpen memory, attention, and decision‑making almost immediately after the workout. Follow‑up meta‑analyses report similar boosts from any moderate‑to‑vigorous aerobic session.

Why it matters in free time: you only need 20–30 minutes to get the effect, and the cognitive lift often lasts for hours. High achievers schedule these “mini sweat sessions” between meetings, on lunch breaks, or first thing in the morning to arrive at work with a clearer head than everyone else.

2. They read—mostly for fun, not just for work

Top performers keep a paperback in their bag or an e‑reader on the nightstand. Reading fiction, in particular, has been shown to strengthen empathy circuits—the same mental muscles you use to negotiate, sell, and lead.

Notice two angles here:

  • Skill building: Non‑fiction fills knowledge gaps.

  • Emotional range: Stories let you step into other people’s shoes, teaching you to read a room better than any management seminar.

Fifteen pages before bed or during a commute adds up to a dozen extra books a year—quiet fuel for creativity and social intelligence.

3. They practice deliberate learning, not random dabbling

Anders Ericsson’s classic work on expert performance shows that focused, feedback‑rich practice is what moves the needle, whether you’re learning code or guitar.

Successful people block out small, intense chunks of free time—often 30–60 minutes—to work on one narrow skill with total concentration.

Key moves:

  • Pick a stretch goal just beyond your comfort zone.

  • Get immediate feedback (a coach, software test suite, or even a metronome).

  • Rest and reflect before the next session.

Compared to “just messing around,” deliberate practice turns evenings and weekends into a personal R&D lab.

4. They journal and reflect on what just happened

A reflective journal isn’t a teenage diary; it’s a performance log. University studies show regular journaling increases self‑awareness and long‑term learning skills in students and professionals alike.

What successful people write about:

  • What went right or wrong today?

  • Which feelings popped up in that tough meeting?

  • One action to try tomorrow.

Ten guilt‑free minutes with a notebook helps them spot patterns faster than colleagues who plow ahead on autopilot.

5. They invest in relationships—even when nothing’s “in it” for them

The longest‑running Harvard Study of Adult Development found that strong social ties predict happiness and longevity better than fame, IQ, or even genetics. High achievers guard their free hours for phone calls with old friends, impromptu coffee dates, or simply cooking dinner with family.

Why this pays off: warm connections become an informal mastermind group. They provide early feedback, emotional support, and sometimes the unexpected introduction that unlocks a new project.

6. They volunteer or give back

Volunteering isn’t just “nice”; psychologists link it to higher life satisfaction and better career outcomes. A 2024 review in Social Science Research found that regular volunteers later saw measurable salary bumps—likely because service builds leadership and problem‑solving chops. Companies are catching on, launching skills‑based volunteer programs precisely to grow employees.

Successful people use a free Saturday to coach a youth team, redesign a charity website, or mentor a junior colleague. The time feels restorative rather than draining, and the résumé quietly strengthens itself.

7. They unplug—phone on airplane mode, mind back in the room

A 2023 systematic review of “digital detox” interventions found consistent drops in stress and spikes in life satisfaction after even short breaks from social media. High performers set boundaries: no Slack after 8 p.m., social apps off Sundays, or a strict “one‑screen” rule during dinner.

The payoff is twofold: lower cognitive clutter and a sharper baseline focus when they do jump back online. Think of it as cleaning your mental browser cache.

8. They step into nature, even if it’s just a city park

You don’t need a mountain trek to feel the benefits. A 2023 study in Scientific Reports showed that adding plants or natural views to an indoor space boosted both mood and working‑memory scores.

Successful people sneak micro‑doses of green into their schedule: a lunchtime walk under trees, coffee on a balcony with potted herbs, or reading on a patch of grass. Those short resets slash stress hormones and refill creative energy.

9. They meditate—or use any mindfulness trick that works for them

Mindfulness has gone mainstream for a reason. MRI research at UC San Diego found that 20 minutes of basic breath meditation reduced both the intensity and the unpleasantness of pain, suggesting wide‑ranging effects on the brain’s stress circuits. Workplace surveys now tie regular meditation to better focus and a happier team culture.

High performers treat mindfulness like mental floss: two minutes before a meeting, a short walking meditation between emails, or a ten‑minute body‑scan at night. The point isn’t to become a monk—it’s to notice distractions sooner and return to what matters faster.

10. They set micro‑goals and plan the week ahead

Writing down goals makes you much more likely to hit them—multiple meta‑analyses put the success boost anywhere from 20 % to 40 %. In practice, successful people use Sunday evenings or Friday afternoons to:

  1. Review what worked (and flopped) this week.

  2. List 3–5 priorities for the next seven days.

  3. Block those priorities onto the calendar before other tasks fill the space.

The ritual takes maybe 20 minutes but prevents hours of wheel‑spinning later.

Wrapping it up

None of these ten habits require genius, luck, or a billionaire’s bank account. They do require making conscious trade‑offs: Netflix episode or neighborhood walk? Scrolling or journaling? The good news—psychology keeps showing that small, intentional choices in your free time pay huge dividends in focus, health, and long‑term success.

Pick one habit this week. Give it a real shot. Then stack another next month. Over time you’ll notice what researchers keep proving and high achievers quietly demonstrate: it’s not just how hard you work during office hours, it’s what you do when the clock is off that sets you apart.

What’s Your Plant-Powered Archetype?

Ever wonder what your everyday habits say about your deeper purpose—and how they ripple out to impact the planet?

This 90-second quiz reveals the plant-powered role you’re here to play, and the tiny shift that makes it even more powerful.

12 fun questions. Instant results. Surprisingly accurate.

 

Lachlan Brown

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Lachlan Brown is a psychology graduate, mindfulness enthusiast, and the bestselling author of Hidden Secrets of Buddhism: How to Live with Maximum Impact and Minimum Ego. Based between Vietnam and Singapore, Lachlan is passionate about blending Eastern wisdom with modern well-being practices.

As the founder of several digital publications, including Hack Spirit, Lachlan has reached millions with his clear, compassionate writing on self-development, relationships, and conscious living. A long-time vegetarian turned mostly plant-based eater, he believes food should nourish both the body and the spirit — and that conscious choices create powerful ripple effects.

When he’s not writing or running his media business, you’ll find him riding his bike through the streets of Saigon, practicing Vietnamese with his wife, or reading about psychology and Buddhist philosophy over a strong black coffee.

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