
How Gen Z are stealing back time from their corporate jobs
My mornings are typically lazy, but not today, because I'm testing the viral 'five-to-nine' routine, which sees corporate Gen Z-ers document themselves — either before work from 5am to 9am or after work from 5pm to 9pm — performing an action-packed step-by-step wellness programme made up of exercise, personal growth work, meal-prepping, skincare and side-hustling. These routines are regimented and seem strenuous, but they have a huge appeal: the five-to-nine video style has been replicated by thousands of creators online, with the hashtag #5to9routine having 35 million views on TikTok alone. Under this tag, you'll find thousands of Gen Z workers showing how they reclaim their time – and their personalities — back from their corporate jobs.
Gen Z's interest in maximising productivity in these four golden hours has taken inspiration from the rise of the '5am club' — a special group of uber-productive superbeings who celebrate the benefits of rising at dawn. Sure, people have always been early risers (famed Vogue editor Anna Wintour, obviously, is one of these people) but the very act of waking before the rest of the world is increasingly common, with celebs including Jennifer Aniston, Mark Zuckerberg and Michelle Obama all claiming to be members of the club. There's also Gwyneth Paltrow, whose morning routine consists of a 30-minute tongue scrape, Ayurvedic oil pull, a 20-minute transcendental meditation and a dance workout. The meeting point between productivity and wellness has risen in popularity as a cultural phenomenon in recent years, thanks to bestselling self-help books including Robin Sharma's The 5am Club, Hal Elrod's The Miracle Morning, Adrienne Herbert's Power Hour and James Clear's Atomic Habits. You can see the same thing happening with the 5pm club, too, who use their evenings to maximise their wellness through the act of winding down mindfully yet efficiently.
Any mere mortal who may prefer to doomscroll in bed each morning or binge Love is Blind in the evenings may feel ashamed when faced with the five-to-nine trend. Ketki, a 24-year-old analyst for a tech policy firm, is one of them. These videos make her feel inferior to her corporate peers. 'I watch these videos and feel inadequate,' she says. 'Everyone seems to be running marathons or balancing some sort of creative pursuit alongside their jobs, and I watch these videos and feel a weird pressure like... am I going to be left behind?'
The five-to-nine lifestyle appeals to Ketki because she also desires to regain control of her life outside of work — it's just an impossible balance to strike. She graduated from studying classics at a Russell Group university in 2022 and began her first graduate role a year and a half ago. But adjusting to the demands of a full-time job was more difficult than she imagined. 'When I joined my job, I got this weird feeling of wanting to reclaim my personality,' she explains. 'Corporate takes so much from you and you have to be switched on all the time. You have no time to go outside, get a full lunch break. I always work through lunch.' A huge part of adjusting to having a full-time job was mourning the open-ended free time that she had become accustomed to as a student. 'At university, you get to see friends or do a sport — things you just don't get out of a corporate job. Now I'm working, it almost feels like you have to sustain the lifestyle you had before but just squeezing it into those two gaps before or after work.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Khaleej Times
21 hours ago
- Khaleej Times
'Skibidi' and 'tradwife': Social media words added to Cambridge dictionary
Words popularised by Gen Z and Gen Alpha including "skibidi", "delulu", and "tradwife" are among 6,000 new entries to the online edition of the Cambridge Dictionary over the last year, its publisher said Monday. Cambridge University Press said tradwife, a portmanteau of traditional wife, reflected "a growing, controversial Instagram and TikTok trend that embraces traditional gender roles". The dictionary also took on the challenge of defining skibidi, a word popularised in online memes, as a term which had "different meanings such as cool or bad, or can be used with no real meaning". The gibberish word was spread by a YouTube channel called "Skibidi Toilet" and is associated with the mindless, "brain rot" content found on social media and consumed by Gen Alpha's overwhelmingly digital lifestyle. The dictionary defined delulu, derived from the word delusional, as "believing things that are not real or true, usually because you choose to". As an example, it cited a 2025 speech in parliament where Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese used the phrase "delulu with no solulu". "It's not every day you get to see words like skibidi and delulu make their way into the Cambridge Dictionary," said Colin McIntosh, Lexical Programme manager at the Cambridge Dictionary. "We only add words where we think they'll have staying power. Internet culture is changing the English language and the effect is fascinating to observe and capture in the Dictionary." Other new phrases include "lewk", used to describe a unique fashion look and popularised by RuPaul's Drag Race, and "inspo", short for inspiration. Work from home culture has given rise to "mouse jiggler", referring to a way to pretend to work when you are not. There is also "forever chemical", man-made chemicals that stay in the environment for years and have gained traction as concerns grow about the irreversible impact of climate change on the health of humans and the plant.


Sharjah 24
a day ago
- Sharjah 24
'Skibidi' and 'tradwife' added to Cambridge dictionary
Cambridge University Press said tradwife, a portmanteau of traditional wife, reflected "a growing, controversial Instagram and TikTok trend that embraces traditional gender roles". The dictionary also took on the challenge of defining skibidi, a word popularised in online memes, as a term which had "different meanings such as cool or bad, or can be used with no real meaning". The gibberish word was spread by a YouTube channel called "Skibidi Toilet" and is associated with the mindless, "brain rot" content found on social media and consumed by Gen Alpha's overwhelmingly digital lifestyle. The dictionary defined delulu, derived from the word delusional, as "believing things that are not real or true, usually because you choose to". As an example, it cited a 2025 speech in parliament where Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese used the phrase "delulu with no solulu". "It's not every day you get to see words like skibidi and delulu make their way into the Cambridge Dictionary," said Colin McIntosh, Lexical Programme manager at the Cambridge Dictionary. "We only add words where we think they'll have staying power. Internet culture is changing the English language and the effect is fascinating to observe and capture in the Dictionary." Other new phrases include "lewk", used to describe a unique fashion look and popularised by RuPaul's Drag Race, and "inspo", short for inspiration. Work from home culture has given rise to "mouse jiggler", referring to a way to pretend to work when you are not. There is also "forever chemical", man-made chemicals that stay in the environment for years and have gained traction as concerns grow about the irreversible impact of climate change on the health of humans and the plant.


Campaign ME
4 days ago
- Campaign ME
Nielsen survey shows shift in Dubai shopping malls visitor patterns
Dubai's shopping malls are increasingly functioning as multi-purpose destinations, combining retail, dining, leisure, and errands in a single visit, according to a new survey of more than 750 residents – The Mall Mindset 2025 – conducted by Nielsen and commissioned by Al Ghurair Centre. The findings point to patterns in visit duration, trip purpose, and demographic engagement that reflect broader urban lifestyles. Dining as a primary reason to visit Ninety-seven per cent of respondents cited food and beverage as a key reason for visiting malls, putting dining on par with shopping and grocery trips. Food halls offering a variety of cuisines and price points in shared social spaces have grown in popularity, reflecting a trend toward communal and experiential eating. Evening footfall remains strong Most visits occur in the evening. Seventy-six per cent of trips take place between 5pm and midnight, with 32 per cent of respondents visiting at least once a week. The survey confirms that evenings continue to be a peak period for mall visits, reflecting established post-work and midweek routines. Longer visit times Visitors are spending more time in malls, with the average visit lasting up to four hours, covering two to seven outlets, and including up to five purchases per trip. This pattern indicates that mall visits are increasingly layered experiences, where shopping, dining and leisure overlap. Younger generation is the largest visitor group The largest visitor group is the 25–34 age bracket, falling in the Gen Z and Millennials bracket, and represents 46 per cent of mall goers. Twenty-three per cent of visits are solo, and discovery is primarily driven by word of mouth (56 per cent), Instagram (45 per cent), and Facebook (32 per cent). These figures highlight the social and digital channels shaping younger consumers' engagement with malls. The Nielsen survey's findings highlight a shift in mall usage, with longer, multi-purpose visits and digitally-influenced discovery shaping footfall patterns in 2025.