18 Micro-Habits That Can Dramatically Increase Your Intelligence In Just Minutes Each Day

Last updated on Jul 07, 2026

Woman increases intelligence. n voitkevich | Pexels
Advertisement

Intelligence is the currency of the future. But if you're not going to work to build that intelligence, you won't be able to make it in the times to come. Luckily, there are ways to grow your intellect, none of which are intimidating. Rather, they are tiny yet effective habits that don't take much time or energy. And when done consistently, they lead to extraordinary gains.

Here are micro-habits that can make you smarter in just minutes each day:

1. Put 'thinking for 10 minutes' on your to-do list

woman thinking deepAndrea Piacquadio / Pexels

If you think about it, you don't really take the time to think anymore. You're always doing something. You're either working or you're on your phone scrolling social media. There's plenty of external stimuli, yet no signs of internal mental stimuli. But thinking is important; it's how you convert your everyday experiences into lasting insights. So, think every day. Think about what you learned that day. Think about how you could solve the problems in your life. Think about how you could solve the problems this world is facing. Please carve out the time for insightful thinking.

RELATED: Doing 11 Basic Tasks On An Annual Basis Literally Makes Your Entire Life Exponentially Better

Advertisement

2. Understand your cognitive biases

woman reading about cognitive biasesChristina Morillo / Pexels

Behavioral science teaches us how humans make decisions, what flaws exist in our thought processes, and how we might fix them. And it's one of the most important subjects one can invest their time in. To start, you can learn about these cognitive biases now and then, find instances in your own life where you act biased, and learn how to fix them.

RELATED: Those Of Us Who Are Good At Reading People Have These 5 Perceptive Traits, According To Research

Advertisement

3. Celebrate errors in judgment

free woman celebratingAndrea Piacquadio / Pexels

An average person denies it when they are wrong. They will argue until the end of the world, but at no cost would they accept that they could have been wrong. Be the opposite. If you're wrong about it, acknowledge it and celebrate it. Because next time, you can learn to be right. People who deny that they are wrong will be wrong the next time as well. Don't be that way. Be wrong once, never twice.

RELATED: 12 Brilliant Micro-Habits Of People Who Are 98% Happier Than Everyone Else

Advertisement

4. Write every single day

man writing on the computerBuro Millennial / Pexels

Writing is an extraordinary endeavor. Your intelligence multiplies because writing forces you to simplify your thoughts so they make sense. It forces you to break apart a concept and get to the basics. While doing so, you learn the general art of simplifying complex ideas, which is one of the very important pillars of high intelligence. You don't necessarily have to become an author — but if you do, more power to you. Even something as simple as a few sentences per day can be incredibly helpful in dramatically increasing your intelligence.

RELATED: Two Career Collapses And $42,000 Of Debt Later, I Reinvented Myself At The Ripe Old Age Of 66

Advertisement

5. Reject your first thoughts in stressful situations

man reflecting by the waterNathan Cowley / Pexels

Whenever something stressful happens, the thoughts that come to your mind are drenched with fear and emotions. At the time, they sound logical, but they're not. The essence of higher intelligence is the ability to control your emotions while making decisions. This is why learning to reject your initial thoughts in stressful situations is important. It allows logical thoughts to follow, which will help you make better decisions.

RELATED: People Who Stay Calm In Stressful Situations Usually Share These 11 Personality Traits

Advertisement

6. Embrace constraints

woman looking out the windowJuan Pablo Serrano / Pexels

People use constraints as excuses. For example, they may say something like, "I can't go to the gym because I have a lot of work to do." However, a healthier alternative is to embrace constraints. If you decide that you want to go to the gym in spite of the amount of work you have to do, you'll force yourself to think of ways to finish your work faster. This teaches you how to increase your efficiency in any field. When you think about it, constraints are a good thing.

RELATED: 11 Micro-Habits Of People Who Stay Calm & Balanced No Matter What

Advertisement

7. Create lists

woman writing listsAndrea Piacquadio / Pexels

Ten is a good number for this exercise. You can write lists about whatever you want, whether it's ten ways to save more money, ten ways to increase efficiency while working, or 1tenways to lose weight. The first few ideas are easy to come up with. But to reach ten, you have to put in mental effort. It's simply a way to exercise your mind and will increase your brainpower when done consistently.

RELATED: People Who Make Lists For Pretty Much Everything Usually Have These 11 Distinct Personality Traits

Advertisement

8. Read quotes and ponder them

woman reading to increase intelligenceAdrienn / Pexels

Sounds cliché, but quotes can be life-changing. Quotes are just a few words, but they carry so much power and wisdom. A simple six-word quote can change your life. For example, "Be a thermostat, not a thermometer." With time, you can even try to write your own quotes. It's an exercise for your brain, as you're trying to fit an immense amount of wisdom in just a few words.

RELATED: This Quote Hits Hard — And It Might Explain Why Your Life Feels Like A Struggle

Advertisement

9. Ask questions

men asking each other questionsMental Health America (MHA) / Pexels

Asking questions is so simple, yet people hesitate to do it because they think it makes them look silly. But that really couldn't be farther from the truth. Don't be that person who refrains from asking questions just because you don't have knowledge about a specific subject. Ask questions to people you consider smart, and grow smarter yourself.

RELATED: Experts Say These Tiny Daily Habits Set You Apart From 98% Of People

Advertisement

10. Don't overthink things

man and woman runningLeeloo The First / Pexels

Thinking is good for growing your intelligence, but never let it substitute for actual physical action. Some life lessons cannot be learned by reading, researching, or thinking. They can only be learned by doing. So go do it.

RELATED: The Art Of Breaking Free: 5 Simple Steps To Challenge What You’ve Been Taught To Believe

Advertisement

11. Play an instrument

woman playing the guitarCharles Parker / Pexels

These days, neuroscientists can hook up people's brains to machines and figure out which parts of the brain light up when doing different activities. Many activities exercise our brains considerably, but nothing beats the way playing an instrument stimulates our brains. It's like fireworks in your brain. TedEd went so far as to call playing instruments the equivalent of a full-body workout for the brain. And research from MIT even suggests that if you want smarter kids, teach them music, not coding.

RELATED: Science Says People With This Specific Hobby Stay Mentally Sharp Into Their 80s And Beyond

Advertisement

12. Practice empathy

two friends hugging empatheticallyAnna Shvets / Pexels

People might think that empathy is a skill of people who are good, but it's really a skill for people who are emotionally intelligent. Intelligence is all about being able to play with multiple perspectives, and empathy is just about seeing things from someone else's perspective, being able to put yourself in someone else's shoes.

RELATED: The Art Of Empathizing: 3 Simple Habits Of People Who Are Just Naturally Great At Understanding Others

Advertisement

13. Give new ideas a chance

woman welcoming new ideasfauxels / Pexels

Fear is deep-rooted in all humans, and it manifests in different ways. One such way is people's tendency to be overly skeptical or even outright reject new, weird, or ridiculously ambitious ideas. However, truly smart individuals are open to such ideas and find potential where others fail to. They find potential in ideas that may not appeal to the majority. Whether they are right or wrong, only time will tell. But the lesson here is that openness is important.

RELATED: Open-Minded People Intuitively Understand These 11 Life Lessons That Confuse Simple Minds

Advertisement

14. Sleep on a tough problem

woman thinking while in bedKATRIN BOLOVTSOVA / Pexels

Sleep is not just "rest" for your body; it's also the time when complex neurological rewiring happens in your brain. Due to this, there have been times when people dreamt of solutions to truly complex scientific problems that seemed too difficult to be solved otherwise. For example, Friedrich August Kekulé, among many other scientists, was frantically trying to figure out the chemical structure of benzene. But the solution constantly eluded him and others. 

One day, Kekulé dreamt of a snake eating its own tail, which led him to realize that the structure of benzene was actually ring-like. Whatever complex problem you're working on right now, think about it deeply before you go to sleep. Collect all the pieces, and perhaps the puzzle will be completed when you wake up.

RELATED: 10 Silent Habits That Push Friends And Family Away Over Time

Advertisement

15. Watch Ted-Ed videos

man watching videos on a televisionAndrea Piacquadio / Pexels

Ted-Ed, best known for its award-winning, animated educational videos on YouTube, is genuinely one of the best YouTube channels. It's a huge library of some truly amazing lessons illustrated in refreshingly entertaining ways. Binge-watch videos on the channel once in a while. It could be a video on how playing an instrument benefits your brain or how to manage your time more effectively.

RELATED: Kids Today Learn The Alphabet Song Completely Differently Than We Did, Explains A Teacher

Advertisement

16. Practice second-order thinking

woman thinking out the car windowAnastasia Shuraeva / Pexels

First-order thinking is basically short-term thinking, and most people are content with it. They aren't able to and don't even try looking beyond the short-term. Let's say you play a game of tennis with a friend, but have a weak backhand and need to convert most of them into forehands, winning the game. You feel good in the short-term because you won, but driving back home, you may realize that in the long-term, you wasted time you could have used to work on your backhand.

Winning that game only made you feel good in those few hours; however, if you had worked on your backhand that day instead of trying to win, you would have been better in the long-term, even if you lost that day. This happens all the time. We chase immediate gratification and fail to think in the second order. Don't do that. Look for the long-term consequences of each and every decision of yours.

RELATED: 4 Things People With High-Level Thinking Skills Notice That Others Don't

Advertisement

17. Take notes

man expanding his brain power while petting dogZen Chung / Pexels

Your brain is nothing but a storage organ that stores memory and allows you to use it when needed. However, like any other storage device, it has its limits. You're not going to remember everything you read or learn. That's why you should jot down every significant thing, taking notes. The smartest people often have notes filled with ideas, quotes, poems, stories, words, or images. Keeping a library of notes builds an extra-somatic (out-of-body) brain for yourself. You can visit them from time to time and use them to enhance the brain you carry.

RELATED: People Who Still Write Things Down Instead Of Typing Usually Have 11 Special Traits

Advertisement

18. Trust your gut

woman trusting her gutSHVETS production / Pexels

People don't trust their gut feelings because they don't understand where they arise from. But your gut instincts don't arise out of thin air. They're just the result of many years of pattern recognition by your brain. Your brain is constantly looking for patterns in your life. So, as you cruise through life having different experiences, your brain recognizes the underlying patterns of these situations so that when such situations recur, your brain knows how to best handle them. It's why your gut instincts deserve more of your trust.

RELATED: 10 Tiny Habits That Make Someone Way More Beautiful, No Matter How Old They Are

Akshad Singi, M.D., is a writer whose work has been published in Better Humans, Mind Cafe, Medium, and more.

Advertisement
Loading...