Atomic habits




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Atomic habits
Plan
HABIT STACKING
FIGURE 7: Habit stacking increases the likelihood that you’ll stick with a habit by stacking your new behavior on top of an old one. This process can be repeated to chain
numerous habits together, each one acting as the cue for the next.
Your morning routine habit stack might look like this:
1. 
After I pour my morning cup of coffee, I will meditate for sixty
seconds.


2. 
After I meditate for sixty seconds, I will write my to-do list for
the day.
3. 
After I write my to-do list for the day, I will immediately begin
my first task.
Or, consider this habit stack in the evening:
1. 
After I finish eating dinner, I will put my plate directly into the
dishwasher.
2. 
After I put my dishes away, I will immediately wipe down the
counter.
3. 
After I wipe down the counter, I will set out my coffee mug for
tomorrow morning.
You can also insert new behaviors into the middle of your current
routines. For example, you may already have a morning routine that looks
like this: Wake up > Make my bed > Take a shower. Let’s say you want to
develop the habit of reading more each night. You can expand your habit
stack and try something like: Wake up > Make my bed > Place a book on
my pillow > Take a shower. Now, when you climb into bed each night, a
book will be sitting there waiting for you to enjoy.
Overall, habit stacking allows you to create a set of simple rules that
guide your future behavior. It’s like you always have a game plan for which
action should come next. Once you get comfortable with this approach, you
can develop general habit stacks to guide you whenever the situation is
appropriate:
Exercise. When I see a set of stairs, I will take them instead of
using the elevator.
Social skills. When I walk into a party, I will introduce myself to
someone I don’t know yet.
Finances. When I want to buy something over $100, I will wait
twenty-four hours before purchasing.


Healthy eating. When I serve myself a meal, I will always put
veggies on my plate first.
Minimalism. When I buy a new item, I will give something away.
(“One in, one out.”)
Mood. When the phone rings, I will take one deep breath and
smile before answering.
Forgetfulness. When I leave a public place, I will check the table
and chairs to make sure I don’t leave anything behind.
No matter how you use this strategy, the secret to creating a successful
habit stack is selecting the right cue to kick things off. Unlike an
implementation intention, which specifically states the time and location for
a given behavior, habit stacking implicitly has the time and location built
into it. When and where you choose to insert a habit into your daily routine
can make a big difference. If you’re trying to add meditation into your
morning routine but mornings are chaotic and your kids keep running into
the room, then that may be the wrong place and time. Consider when you
are most likely to be successful. Don’t ask yourself to do a habit when
you’re likely to be occupied with something else.
Your cue should also have the same frequency as your desired habit. If
you want to do a habit every day, but you stack it on top of a habit that only
happens on Mondays, that’s not a good choice.
One way to find the right trigger for your habit stack is by brainstorming
a list of your current habits. You can use your Habits Scorecard from the
last chapter as a starting point. Alternatively, you can create a list with two
columns. In the first column, write down the habits you do each day without
fail.
*
For example:
Get out of bed.
Take a shower.
Brush your teeth.
Get dressed.
Brew a cup of coffee.
Eat breakfast.
Take the kids to school.


Start the work day.
Eat lunch.
End the work day.
Change out of work clothes.
Sit down for dinner.
Turn off the lights.
Get into bed.
Your list can be much longer, but you get the idea. In the second column,
write down all of the things that happen to you each day without fail. For
example:
The sun rises.
You get a text message.
The song you are listening to ends.
The sun sets.
Armed with these two lists, you can begin searching for the best place to
layer your new habit into your lifestyle.
Habit stacking works best when the cue is highly specific and
immediately actionable. Many people select cues that are too vague. I made
this mistake myself. When I wanted to start a push-up habit, my habit stack
was “When I take a break for lunch, I will do ten push-ups.” At first glance,
this sounded reasonable. But soon, I realized the trigger was unclear. Would
I do my push-ups before I ate lunch? After I ate lunch? Where would I do
them? After a few inconsistent days, I changed my habit stack to: “When I
close my laptop for lunch, I will do ten push-ups next to my desk.”
Ambiguity gone.
Habits like “read more” or “eat better” are worthy causes, but these goals
do not provide instruction on how and when to act. Be specific and clear:
After I close the door. After I brush my teeth. After I sit down at the table.
The specificity is important. The more tightly bound your new habit is to a
specific cue, the better the odds are that you will notice when the time
comes to act.


The 1st Law of Behavior Change is to make it obvious. Strategies like
implementation intentions and habit stacking are among the most practical
ways to create obvious cues for your habits and design a clear plan for
when and where to take action.
Chapter Summary
The 1st Law of Behavior Change is make it obvious.
The two most common cues are time and location.
Creating an implementation intention is a strategy you can use to
pair a new habit with a specific time and location.
The implementation intention formula is: I will [BEHAVIOR] at
[TIME] in [LOCATION].
Habit stacking is a strategy you can use to pair a new habit with a
current habit.
The habit stacking formula is: After [CURRENT HABIT], I will
[NEW HABIT].


6
Motivation Is Overrated; Environment Often
Matters More
A
N
NE 
T
HORNDIKE


primary care physician at Massachusetts General Hospital
in Boston, had a crazy idea. She believed she could improve the eating
habits of thousands of hospital staff and visitors without changing their
willpower or motivation in the slightest way. In fact, she didn’t plan on
talking to them at all.
Thorndike and her colleagues designed a six-month study to alter the
“choice architecture” of the hospital cafeteria. They started by changing
how drinks were arranged in the room. Originally, the refrigerators located
next to the cash registers in the cafeteria were filled with only soda. The
researchers added water as an option to each one. Additionally, they placed
baskets of bottled water next to the food stations throughout the room. Soda
was still in the primary refrigerators, but water was now available at all
drink locations.
Over the next three months, the number of soda sales at the hospital
dropped by 11.4 percent. Meanwhile, sales of bottled water increased by
25.8 percent. They made similar adjustments—and saw similar results—
with the food in the cafeteria. Nobody had said a word to anyone eating
there.

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