
There’s a certain kind of person who draws you in without trying. I’ve always noticed them in small moments: the friend who answers a question without hedging, the woman at dinner who says exactly what she means, and the coworker who doesn’t rush to fill the space after she speaks.
They’re not louder or more charismatic than anyone else in the room, but something about them feels settled. Their attention isn’t scattered. They aren’t scanning the room for approval. Being around them makes you feel calmer—and you really can’t explain why.
Featured image from our interview with Babba Rivera by Belathée Photography.

How to Be More Magnetic: A 7-Day Reset That Actually Changes How You Show Up
For a long time, I assumed that quality—magnetism—was innate. Something you either had or you didn’t. But I’ve come to see it differently. What we call magnetism is often the result of small, repeatable behaviors: the way someone takes care of their body, how they protect their time, the way they speak and move through the world. What they tolerate—and what they decide they no longer will.
Mimi Bouchard—founder of the Activations app and author of Activate Your Future Self—has built an entire framework around exactly this. Her perspective on what actually makes someone magnetic cuts straight to the point: “Honestly? The boring stuff. How you talk to yourself while you’re washing your face, choosing the outfit that makes you feel confident, whether you rush out the door or actually take a breath first. People are always looking for the ‘big thing,’ but your whole system is picking up on every little cue you give it all day.”
I started noticing that in my own life this past year. Relationships that feel energizing instead of destabilizing. A promotion that matched the responsibility I had already been carrying. Where did it come from? Definitely not my trying to be more impressive. I have this life now, because I’m learning to reduce internal friction and move forward with intention.
Mimi Bouchard
Mimi Bouchard is the founder of Activations, a personal development app built around the practice of becoming your future self through small, daily actions. She is also the author of Activate Your Future Self, which offers strategies for shifting every area of your life—from relationships to career to finances—by closing the gap between who you are and who you’re becoming.
Why This Works
There’s a neurological reason small habits compound the way they do. Bouchard points to the Reticular Activating System—your brain’s built-in filter for what it decides to pay attention to. “Whatever you’re looking for, you start finding more of,” she explains. “So if you move through your life expecting good things, expecting connection, expecting doors to open—your brain is literally scanning for evidence of that without you even trying.”
Magnetic people aren’t a different species. They’ve simply trained their minds to notice what everyone else walks past. These seven habits are how you start doing the same.
Day 1: Build Physical Confidence
One of the most counterintuitive shifts I made this year was starting with my body instead of my mindset. I’ve always treated confidence as something mental (a perspective to adopt, a belief to strengthen …). But I’ve found more traction by reverse-engineering the process.
Before trying to change how I think, I focus on changing my physiology.
Confidence feels abstract until your body feels capable. When your body starts providing evidence that you’re strong, well-fueled, and rested, your mind tends to follow. I’m letting go of a fake-it-until-you-make-it approach and instead diving into embodying confidence from the outset.
Incorporating strength training into my routine, eating enough, and protecting my sleep has transformed how I show up in the world.
What Changed for Me
- I picked up heavier weights in my workout classes—and felt more confident as my strength grew.
- I stopped skipping meals in the name of productivity (or calories saved, argh).
- I treated sleep like part of my job.
As my strength increased, I stopped bracing before I spoke. When I fueled properly, my decisions became clearer. When I was rested, my reactions slowed down. Over time, those physical signals started to accumulate. My body had proof that it was capable—and my mindset adjusted accordingly.
Try This Today
- Swap one workout session for strength training.
- Eat a protein-forward breakfast.
- Choose a bedtime you’ll treat as non-negotiable. Repeat.
Reflect: Where am I trying to force my way into confidence instead of building it physically?
Day 2: Protect Your Energy
For most of my twenties, I mistook availability for kindness. I responded instantly, I over-committed, and I said yes because I didn’t want to be difficult. I’m sure every woman reading this can relate.
Of course, I wondered why I felt resentful. The answer? Magnetism doesn’t grow in exhaustion. It grows in discernment.
What Changed for Me
- I stopped overexplaining my no.
- I delayed responses instead of replying from pressure.
- I left events when I was ready—not when I felt obligated.
The surprising part? People around me adjusted.
Try This Today
- Say no without adding extra justification. (Standing up for yourself doesn’t make you a bad person.)
- Delay one non-urgent response.
- Don’t over-clarify a decision you’ve already made.
Reflect: Where do I overexplain myself out of fear that I won’t be liked?
Day 3: Refine Your Language
I used to think confidence meant being quick—quick to respond, quick to clarify, and quick to prove I knew what I was talking about. But the most compelling people I’ve worked with are deliberate, not fast.
What Changed for Me
- I removed “just,” “sorry,” and “kind of” from my vocabulary.
- I paused before answering questions.
- I stopped cushioning opinions in disclaimers.
Try This Today
- Pause for two full breaths before responding.
- Say your opinion once, without softening it.
- Let silence exist without filling it.
Reflect: Where do I dilute my words to make others comfortable?
Day 4: Dress With Intention
I used to treat certain clothes as aspirational. I’d wear them “when I felt more confident.” Or save them for bigger moments. 2026 is the year I stop waiting.
What Changed for Me
- I edited my closet the way I edit my calendar—keeping only what actually fits my life.
- I stopped buying pieces that felt almost right. (And that almost fit, but didn’t.)
- I wore outfits that matched how I wanted to show up that day.
When what you’re wearing aligns with how you want to move through the world, you stop adjusting yourself mid-conversation.
Try This Today
- Build one outfit that feels more intentional.
- Remove three items that feel like a past version of you.
- Wear something you’ve been saving (for the right occasion, for when you lose weight—anything).
Reflect: If I dressed like someone who trusted herself completely, what would change?
Day 5: Raise Your Standards
Standards show up in the small decisions before they show up anywhere else. The plans you decline, the conversations you don’t entertain, and the situations you choose to step away from.
They’re grounded in what you stop allowing. And this is where Bouchard’s framework becomes visible in real time: every time you act like someone with standards, your brain files it as evidence that you are that person. The Reticular Activating System works in your favor only when your behavior gives it something to work with.
This doesn’t have to look like announcements, but adjustments. And as a result, the right people will rise, and the wrong ones will drift away.
What Changed for Me
- I stopped initiating one-sided dynamics.
- I declined opportunities I didn’t actually want (even if they sounded impressive on paper).
- I asked directly for what I needed instead of hinting.
I didn’t make announcements—I made adjustments. As a result, the right people rose, and the wrong ones drifted away.
Try This Today
- Ask directly for what you want.
- Clarify expectations instead of hoping they’re understood.
- Decline something that drains you—even if you could handle it.
Reflect: Where am I accepting less than I would advise a friend to accept?
Day 6: Choose Depth Over Noise
Constant consumption feels productive until you realize your thoughts have stopped being your own. News, opinions, hot takes, reactions—input isn’t the same as growth, and magnetism requires something that noise makes impossible: digestion.
What Changed for Me
- I reduced passive scrolling.
- I read long-form instead of headlines.
- I let myself think before forming an opinion.
When you aren’t constantly absorbing what everyone else thinks, your perspective sharpens.
Your opinions feel earned rather than borrowed from a stranger on the internet. That’s the difference between someone who’s interesting to talk to and someone who just has a lot to say.
Try This Today
- Replace scrolling with 20 pages of a book.
- Spend one hour without consuming content.
- Follow one curiosity deeply instead of five shallowly.
Reflect: Where am I consuming more than I’m creating or thinking?
Day 7: Choose One and Commit
The instinct when you want to change is to change everything at once. Overhaul the routine, the habits, the mindset—everything, immediately. It never lasts, because that’s not how identity actually works.
What actually shifted things for me was much smaller. Instead of reinventing myself, I started reinforcing behaviors that already made me feel capable. Strength. Boundaries. Precision. Standards. Depth. Each one started as a single decision I repeated long enough that it became part of how I move through the world.
Bouchard puts it better than I could: “Identity is built in the repetition, not the resolution. Sure, the dramatic overhaul feels good for maybe a week—and then real life shows up. But something small that you actually do every day? That becomes who you are.”
That’s the whole thing, really.
What Changed for Me
- I stopped chasing dramatic resets.
- I picked one behavior at a time and practiced it until it felt normal.
- Once it felt natural, I added another.
- Over time, those choices stacked. My life began to reflect the standards I was practicing.
Try This Today
- Choose one habit from this week to practice daily for the next 30 days.
- Write it into your calendar so it has a place in your day.
- Keep a simple checkmark system—one mark for every day you follow through.
- Watch how quickly consistency starts to compound.
Reflect: If I behaved this way consistently for six months, who would I become?
When Your Behavior Catches Up to Your Standards
A year ago, I was capable but unconvinced. I worked hard, but I still second-guessed myself. I wanted more responsibility, but I wasn’t fully inhabiting the life I already had.
Game-changing: I stopped seeing my personality as the problem and instead focused on shifting my behavior. None of these choices felt dramatic on their own. But over time, they created a different baseline for how I moved through the world.
Magnetism is about reducing internal friction. When your behavior matches your standards—when your words don’t require apology and your body feels capable of carrying your life—people notice.
So choose one habit, commit to it, and let it compound.
This post was last updated on May 28, 2026, to include new insights.
The post 7 Small Habits That Will Make You More Magnetic appeared first on Camille Styles.

