Atomic habits




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Atomic habits
Plan
Very easy
Easy
Moderate
Hard
Very hard
Put on your running
shoes
Walk ten minutes
Walk ten thousand steps
Run a 5K
Run a
marathon
Write one sentence
Write one
paragraph
Write one thousand
words
Write a five-thousand-word
article
Write a book
Open your notes
Study for ten
minutes
Study for three hours
Get straight A’s
Earn a PhD
People often think it’s weird to get hyped about reading one page or
meditating for one minute or making one sales call. But the point is not to
do one thing. The point is to master the habit of showing up. The truth is, a
habit must be established before it can be improved. If you can’t learn the
basic skill of showing up, then you have little hope of mastering the finer
details. Instead of trying to engineer a perfect habit from the start, do the
easy thing on a more consistent basis. You have to standardize before you
can optimize.
As you master the art of showing up, the first two minutes simply
become a ritual at the beginning of a larger routine. This is not merely a
hack to make habits easier but actually the ideal way to master a difficult
skill. The more you ritualize the beginning of a process, the more likely it
becomes that you can slip into the state of deep focus that is required to do
great things. By doing the same warm-up before every workout, you make
it easier to get into a state of peak performance. By following the same
creative ritual, you make it easier to get into the hard work of creating. By
developing a consistent power-down habit, you make it easier to get to bed
at a reasonable time each night. You may not be able to automate the whole
process, but you can make the first action mindless. Make it easy to start
and the rest will follow.
The Two-Minute Rule can seem like a trick to some people. You know
that the real goal is to do more than just two minutes, so it may feel like
you’re trying to fool yourself. Nobody is actually aspiring to read one page
or do one push-up or open their notes. And if you know it’s a mental trick,
why would you fall for it?
If the Two-Minute Rule feels forced, try this: do it for two minutes and
then stop. Go for a run, but you must stop after two minutes. Start
meditating, but you must stop after two minutes. Study Arabic, but you
must stop after two minutes. It’s not a strategy for starting, it’s the whole
thing. Your habit can only last one hundred and twenty seconds.


One of my readers used this strategy to lose over one hundred pounds. In
the beginning, he went to the gym each day, but he told himself he wasn’t
allowed to stay for more than five minutes. He would go to the gym,
exercise for five minutes, and leave as soon as his time was up. After a few
weeks, he looked around and thought, “Well, I’m always coming here
anyway. I might as well start staying a little longer.” A few years later, the
weight was gone.
Journaling provides another example. Nearly everyone can benefit from
getting their thoughts out of their head and onto paper, but most people give
up after a few days or avoid it entirely because journaling feels like a
chore.
*
The secret is to always stay below the point where it feels like
work. Greg McKeown, a leadership consultant from the United Kingdom,
built a daily journaling habit by specifically writing less than he felt like.
He always stopped journaling before it seemed like a hassle. Ernest
Hemingway believed in similar advice for any kind of writing. “The best
way is to always stop when you are going good,” he said.
Strategies like this work for another reason, too: they reinforce the
identity you want to build. If you show up at the gym five days in a row—
even if it’s just for two minutes—you are casting votes for your new
identity. You’re not worried about getting in shape. You’re focused on
becoming the type of person who doesn’t miss workouts. You’re taking the
smallest action that confirms the type of person you want to be.
We rarely think about change this way because everyone is consumed by
the end goal. But one push-up is better than not exercising. One minute of
guitar practice is better than none at all. One minute of reading is better than
never picking up a book. It’s better to do less than you hoped than to do
nothing at all.
At some point, once you’ve established the habit and you’re showing up
each day, you can combine the Two-Minute Rule with a technique we call
habit shaping to scale your habit back up toward your ultimate goal. Start
by mastering the first two minutes of the smallest version of the behavior.
Then, advance to an intermediate step and repeat the process—focusing on
just the first two minutes and mastering that stage before moving on to the
next level. Eventually, you’ll end up with the habit you had originally
hoped to build while still keeping your focus where it should be: on the first
two minutes of the behavior.



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