The Art of Romanticizing Your Everyday Life
A ritual menu to add warmth, intention, and beauty to your weekdays
I’ve always believed that life feels richer when you build little rituals into your day, tiny anchors that remind me that it’s my birthright to feel like a lil fairy in awe that I get to experience this life. That’s where this week’s Substack comes in. Think of it as a ritual menu: a list of small, intentional acts that can transform your weekdays from rushed and repetitive to something meaningful and memorable. Some tips will feel like tiny shifts in perspective, others are practical habits, but all are meant to bring warmth, beauty, and a little more romance into your routine.
Whether it’s lighting a candle before dinner, curating your surroundings like a scene from your favorite comfort movie, or simply taking a moment to notice the beauty in your everyday life, these rituals are yours to play with. Choose what resonates, make them your own, and enjoy the process of turning the mundane into something magical.
1. MORNING: OPENING THE DAY WITH INTENTION


How you begin the day sets the tone for everything that follows. Mornings can feel frantic, or they can feel like self-respect, a moment to anchor yourself before the world asks anything of you. Romanticizing your mornings isn’t about adding a dozen extra steps, it’s about making the ones you already do feel more intentional, more luxe, and more yours.
The Coffee (or Tea) Ceremony: Brew coffee in a French press instead of a machine, play soft piano music in the background, use a beautiful mug, invest in a tea or coffee that feels like a treat if you’ve been using ingredients that feel purely functional. I rediscovered my love of stovetop espresso in Madrid and it fills the house with such a beautiful aroma in the morning.
Get Ready Like You Have Somewhere Important to Be (Even If You Don’t): Whether you're heading out or staying in, dress in a way that makes you feel good. Throw on intentional loungewear that feels chic yet comfortable, use your expensive perfume, enjoy the process of putting on your skincare, experiment with your makeup look! I find days where I don’t have anywhere to be to be the perfect opportunity to try out one of the eyeshadow looks I have in my TikTok makeup saves folder that I would be too afraid to wear out in the daylight otherwise.
Script Your Day Like a Movie Scene: Before diving into the day, take a few minutes to script it out. Write down how you want to feel, not just what you need to do. What will make you feel like the main character of your life today? Make a list, set an intention, or jot down a few sentences as if you're already living your ideal day. I love doing this to a guided meditation on the Activations app, they have a specific category for written meditations, or just doing it to a frequency that feels best for what I need that day.
2. MIDDAY: ROMANTICIZING PRODUCTIVITY & WORK


Work, whether you love it, tolerate it, or dream of escaping it, takes up a significant part of the day. The key to romanticizing productivity is to create an environment and rhythm that makes work feel more elevated and more yours.
Cultivate a Workspace That Inspires You: If your desk feels uninspired, your work will, too. Start by clearing visual clutter, remove anything that doesn’t serve a purpose or bring you joy. Add small luxuries: a scented candle, a sleek notebook, a beautiful water glass, introduce warmth with soft lighting or fresh flowers.
There is Power in a Midday Reset: There’s something deeply satisfying about a structured work session followed by an intentional break. Read a few pages of a book mid-afternoon. Step outside for five minutes of fresh air. Make a midday drink that’s more soothing than stimulating — I love making hot cacao, preferably ceremonial grade for maximum creativity without the coffee jitters. And if you have time for it, carve out 30-45 minutes to work on a personal project or do something purely creative, studies show that this can be really beneficial for your work output at your day job.
Making Work Feel Cinematic: When the day starts dragging, small sensory shifts can make all the difference. Put on instrumental music that makes you feel like the main character: Parisian jazz, soft piano, lo-fi beats. Light that expensive candle you’ve been saving for a special occasion but has sat on your tv stand for years, or burn some sage to clear bad energy when that annoying coworker is getting on your nerves again. If you’ve gotten through the bulk of your deep work, keep a show on in the background that sets the mood you want. I’ve been rotating between Mad Men, which is one of my comfort watches, and The Empress, which is visually stunning and is helping me brush up on Habsburg history for an upcoming trip to Vienna.
3. EVENING: WINDING DOWN


Mark Your Transition: Weekends feel different because we often mark the transition from day to night, whether that’s meeting a friend for dinner, cooking a nice meal, or doing something just for ourselves. Change into silk pajamas, an oversized knit, or a cozy robe that instantly signals the day is done.
A Mid-Week Aperitivo Ritual: Treat yourself to a small glass of wine, a mocktail with fresh herbs, or an elderflower tonic in a nice glass. Just something that signals the end of the day. Play something smooth, atmospheric, and different from your daytime sounds: soft bossa nova, jazz, or classical pieces that feel cinematic.
A Tech-Free, Sensory-Filled Nightcap: Give your brain permission to unwind by stepping away from screens at least an hour before bed (preferably two, but I know some of us have annoying jobs that require us to be on the clock 24/7 (I really think this should be illegal)). Read a book in bed with a warm drink like chamomile tea, golden milk, or for the overthinkers who have an extra hard time quieting their minds, a non-alcoholic nightcap like Moon Juice’s Magnesi-Om works wonders for me.
4. THE MINDSET SHIFT: CULTIVATING JOY AS A LIFESTYLE
Life feels different when you stop rushing through it, and treating the in-between moments as meaningless filler. This isn’t about aesthetics for the sake of aesthetics. It’s about presence, and training your mind to find richness in the details, and learning to savor more.
Build “Weekday Traditions” That Feel Special: Instead of waiting for the weekend to have plans you love, create small rituals throughout the week that give you something to look forward to.
Monday Movie Night: A cozy film after dinner with popcorn and dim lights.
Tuesday Book Hour: Read in a favorite spot with a nice drink.
Wednesday Comfort Dinner: A home-cooked meal that feels nourishing and nostalgic.
Thursday Creative Hour: Write, paint, bake, or do something just for the joy of it.
Romanticizing Is a Perspective Shift, Not a Performance: You don’t need fresh flowers, an expensive candle, or a perfect morning routine to live beautifully. You just need to be here. Beauty exists in the exact same places you’ve always been. You just have to look for it.
Make Peace with the Pace of Your Life: So much of our dissatisfaction comes from rushing. Rushing to the next milestone, the next accomplishment, the next version of ourselves. Life is also in the waiting, the pauses, the moments that don’t seem to “count” but are shaping you all the same.
At the heart of romanticizing your life is the decision to pay attention. I am new to this myself and have only started to feel like I’m doing a decent job of being present the past year or so, and it’s been one of the most impactful things for improving my sense of wellbeing. I hope as you move through the week, you can find some moments to ask yourself: How can I make this task feel just a little more beautiful? And I hope it makes the everyday just a little bit more exciting to wake up for.
Me shumë dashuri,
Leidi
Love this whole piece - also so good for us to remember that romanticizing is a perspective shift not a performance.
Lately I've have been working hard to make sure my daily routines build me up emotionally and physically and not just exhaust me. I'd encourage everyone to do so. It is soooo worth it.