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Raphaëlle Giordano: Routinology & CBT for a Successful Second Life

Gildas GarrecCBT Psychopractitioner
6 min read

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TL;DR: Life on autopilot — accomplishing expected social steps without ever wondering if it's really one's own — is the contemporary illness described by Raphaëlle Giordano. Her "routinology" proposes to exit sclerosing routines, an approach that cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) and ACT scientifically structure. The process rests on three pillars: clarify your deep values rather than your "shoulds," defuse from your limiting thoughts by observing them without believing them, then act through small coherent steps. Concretely, reintroducing novelty, reconnecting to the body, actively choosing your relationships, and creating rather than consuming are often enough.
Your Second Life Begins When You Realize You Only Have One by Raphaëlle Giordano sold millions of copies worldwide. Its success reveals a contemporary illness: living your life on autopilot, accomplishing expected social steps (studies, work, couple, children), and waking up one day wondering "is this really my life?". Giordano invented the word "routinology" to designate this science of exiting sclerosing routines. CBT offers a more structured framework for the same construction site.

The default life: an invisible trap

The human brain is wired for energy economy. Once a life is organized, it repeats it — out of habit, not by choice. It's efficient but anesthetizing. After a few years, we no longer live our life: we endure it with a comfort that resembles peace.

The signals of this "default life":

  • Sunday evening that creates anxiety rather than joy

  • Sensation of "going through the motions" without deep interest

  • Diffuse frustration without identifiable cause

  • Repetitive fantasies of rupture (resignation, divorce, departure)

  • Loss of joy in activities that produced it


It's not (yet) depression. It's an existential void à la Frankl — the disease of those who have everything they need and don't understand why it's not enough.

The midlife crisis, revisited

Formerly called "noon demon," this period of questioning between 40 and 55 has been medicalized, then ridiculed. Giordano rehabilitates it: it's not a weakness, it's a signal. The psyche asks for a recalibration.

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Developmental psychology research (Levinson, Erikson) confirms: the second half of life requires different psychological tasks than the first. If we continue to do what worked at 25, we progressively misalign.

Routinology and ACT: the parallels

Steven Hayes' Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) offers a structured framework for what Giordano describes intuitively. Three pillars:

1. Clarify your values

Not your "shoulds" (what you think you should do), but your real values (what truly matters to you). The "values column" exercise consists of identifying what would make you say at 80: "I am proud to have lived this way."

2. Cognitive defusion

Observing your limiting thoughts without believing them. "I have the thought that I can't change" is different from "I can't change." This semantic distinction creates a space where action becomes possible.

3. Coherent action

Once values are clear and limiting thoughts are defused, acting by small steps aligned with these values. Not the spectacular change, but the daily readjustment.

Practical levers to exit autopilot

Reintroduce novelty

The brain on autopilot is a brain whose neural circuits are settled in their grooves. Reintroducing novelty regenerates these circuits:

  • A new monthly activity

  • An unusual reading

  • An encounter outside your usual circle

  • A different itinerary to go to work


Reconnect to the body

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Default life often disconnects from the body. The body becomes a tool, no longer a perception space. Reconnecting:

  • Mindfulness practice (even 10 minutes a day)

  • Regular physical activity that you choose (not impose)

  • Slow eating, mindful of tastes

  • Sleep respected, not negotiated


Choose your relationships

Default life often accumulates obligation relationships (work, family, social). Actively choosing your relationships:

  • Reducing time with people who exhaust you

  • Increasing time with people who nourish you

  • Daring to say no to "obligation" social commitments

  • Initiating relationships outside the usual circles


Create rather than consume

Default life is often a life of consumption (TV, social networks, shopping). Substituting acts of creation:

  • Cooking (rather than ordering)

  • Writing, drawing, music

  • Manual repair, gardening

  • Voluntary engagement that creates concrete impact


The trap of radical change

A common error: thinking that getting out of routine requires a great rupture — leaving everything, divorcing, moving to the countryside. These radical changes often hide an escape from oneself rather than a true recalibration.

The CBT approach favors gradual changes: identify the misalignment areas, adjust each one progressively, observe the effects, continue. After a year, life has been transformed without the destruction of what was working.

When to consult

A therapist can help if:

  • The existential void becomes depression

  • The disalignment with your values is chronic

  • You feel paralyzed in front of changes you nevertheless desire

  • Past traumas resurface during this period

  • Family or professional conflicts amplify


To explore your relational patterns that may participate in this autopilot, analyze your message exchanges.

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Conclusion

Routinology is not a magic recipe. It's an awareness that you can be the author of your life rather than the passenger. CBT and ACT offer structured tools to make this awareness into a concrete and lasting transformation.

Your second life doesn't necessarily start with a rupture. It can start tomorrow morning, with a new small choice aligned with what you really are.

FAQ

Should I leave everything to start a "second life"?

Not necessarily. Most lasting transformations are made through gradual adjustments, not through radical ruptures. Identify the misaligned areas and adjust each one progressively.

At what age does this "second life" usually start?

The classic period is between 40 and 55, but it can occur at any age. The trigger is more an inner signal than a chronological age.

What if I don't know what my "real values" are?

This is precisely the work to do. Several exercises help: the 80-year-old test (what will I want to have lived?), the immediate gratitude (what nourishes me really?), or the values inventory (Schwartz scale).
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About the author

Gildas Garrec · CBT Psychopractitioner

Certified practitioner in cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT), author of 16 books on applied psychology and relationships. Over 900 clinical articles published across Psychologie et Sérénité.

📚 16 published books📝 900+ articles🎓 CBT certified
Raphaëlle Giordano: Routinology & CBT for a Successful Second Life | Conversation Analysis - ScanMyLove