HOW TO  CREATE   A    GOOD HABIT



 
The 1st  Law: Make It     Obvious
1.1: Fill   out  the  Habits Scorecard. Write down your current habits to       become      aware of    them. 1.2: Use implementation      intentions:   “I     will  [BEHAVIOR] at       [TIME] in    [LOCATION].” 1.3: Use habit stacking:     “After [CURRENT HABIT],      I      will       [NEW HABIT].” 1.4: Design your environment. Make the  cues of    good habits obvious       and visible.
The 2nd Law: Make It     Attractive
2.1: Use temptation  bundling.     Pair an   action you want to       do   with an   action you need to    do. 2.2: Join a     culture where your desired behavior     is     the  normal       behavior. 2.3: Create a     motivation  ritual. Do  something  you enjoy       immediately before a     difficult habit.
The 3rd Law: Make It     Easy
 
The 4th  Law: Make It     Satisfying
 

HOW TO  BREAK      A    BAD HABIT

 
Inversion  of    the  1st  Law: Make It     Invisible
1.5: Reduce      exposure.   Remove     the  cues of    your bad       habits from your environment.
Inversion  of    the  2nd Law: Make It     Unattractive
2.4: Reframe     your mind-set.    Highlight     the  benefits      of       avoiding      your bad habits.
Inversion  of    the  3rd Law: Make It     Difficult
 
Inversion  of    the  4th  Law: Make It     Unsatisfying
 

You                can download  a     printable    version       of    this    habits cheat sheet at: atomichabits.com/cheatsheet

THE 3RD LAW

Make It Easy

11

Walk Slowly, but Never Backward

O

N    THE FIRST day of class, Jerry Uelsmann, a   professor at the

University of Florida,  divided   his film photography  students     into two groups.

Everyone    on the left side of the classroom, he explained,     would    be in the     “quantity” group.   They would    be     graded   solely on the amount of work  they produced. On     the final day of class, he would    tally the number    of     photos   submitted by each student. One hundred photos would     rate an A, ninety    photos   a   B, eighty    photos   a     C, and so on.

Meanwhile, everyone on the right side of the room would    be     in the “quality”   group.   They would    be graded   only on     the excellence of their work. They would    only need to produce     one photo    during   the semester, but to get an A, it     had to be a   nearly    perfect  image.

At the end of the term, he was surprised to find that all     the best photos    were produced by the quantity group.     During  the semester, these students were busy taking    photos,     experimenting with composition    and lighting, testing   out     various  methods in the darkroom, and learning from their     mistakes. In the process  of creating hundreds   of photos,     they honed    their skills. Meanwhile,     the quality group sat     around  speculating about     perfection. In the end, they had little to show for their efforts   other than unverified theories and     one mediocre photo.*

It is  easy to get bogged  down trying    to find the optimal     plan for change: the fastest   way to lose weight,  the best     program to build muscle,  the perfect  idea for a   side     hustle.   We are so focused  on figuring out    the best     approach that we never get around  to taking    action.   As

Voltaire once wrote,    “The best is  the enemy   of the good.”

I refer to this as the difference between being in motion     and taking action. The two ideas sound    similar,  but they’re     not the same.     When you’re   in motion, you’re     planning and strategizing    and learning. Those are all good     things,   but they don’t produce a   result.

Action, on the other hand, is  the type of behavior that will     deliver   an outcome.   If  I   outline   twenty   ideas for     articles  I   want to write,     that’s motion. If  I   actually     sit down and write an article,   that’s action.   If  I search for     a   better    diet plan and read a   few books    on the     topic, that’s motion. If  I   actually eat a   healthy  meal,     that’s action.

Sometimes motion  is  useful,   but it  will never produce an     outcome by    itself. It  doesn’t  matter   how many times you go     talk to the personal trainer, that motion  will never get you in     shape.    Only the action    of working out will get the result     you’re    looking  to achieve.

If motion  doesn’t  lead to results,  why do we do it?     Sometimes we do it because we actually need to plan or     learn more.    But more often than not, we do it  because     motion  allows    us to feel like we’re making progress without     running the risk of failure.   Most of us are experts  at avoiding criticism. It  doesn’t  feel good to fail or to be     judged   publicly, so we tend to avoid situations where    that     might    happen. And that’s the biggest reason   why you slip     into motion  rather    than taking    action:   you want to     delay failure.

It’s    easy to be in motion  and convince yourself that you’re    still making    progress. You think,    “I’ve got conversations going    with four potential clients   right now. This is  good. We’re moving in the right direction.” Or, “I  brainstormed some ideas for that book I   want to write. This is  coming together.”

Motion makes    you feel like you’re    getting  things    done.     But really, you’re   just preparing to get something done. When     preparation becomes a   form of procrastination, you need to     change  something. You don’t want to merely   be planning.     You want to be practicing.

If you want to master   a   habit,     the key is  to start     with repetition, not perfection. You don’t need to map out every     feature  of a   new habit.     You just need to practice it.     This is  the first takeaway of the 3rd Law: you just need to     get your reps in.


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