THE PLATEAU OF LATENT POTENTIAL



FIGURE   2:    We  often expect progress     to    be   linear. At     the  very least, we  hope it will  come quickly.       In    reality,     the  results of    our  efforts are  often delayed.     It     is not     until months       or    years later that we  realize the  true     value of    the  previous work we  have done. This can result in     a     “valley of    disappointment”     where people feel discouraged     after putting in    weeks or    months       of    hard work without     experiencing any results. However,   this  work was not  wasted.     It     was simply being stored. It     is     not  until much later     that the  full  value of    previous efforts      is     revealed.

All big things    come from small beginnings.     The seed of every     habit is  a   single,    tiny decision. But as that decision is     repeated, a   habit sprouts  and grows    stronger. Roots     entrench themselves and branches grow. The task of breaking a     bad habit is  like uprooting a   powerful oak within us. And     the task of building a   good habit is  like cultivating a delicate  flower    one day at a   time.

But    what determines whether we stick with a   habit long enough     to survive the Plateau  of Latent   Potential and break through     to the other side? What is  it  that causes   some people   to     slide into unwanted habits and enables  others    to enjoy the     compounding effects   of good ones?

FORGET ABOUT GOALS, FOCUS ON SYSTEMS INSTEAD

Prevailing wisdom claims    that the best way to achieve  what we     want in life—getting into better    shape,    building a     successful business, relaxing more and worrying less, spending     more time with friends   and family— is to set specific,     actionable goals.

For    many years,     this was how I   approached    my habits,     too. Each one was a   goal to be reached. I   set goals for     the grades   I   wanted  to get in school, for the weights     I   wanted  to lift in the gym, for the profits   I wanted     to earn in business. I   succeeded at a   few, but I     failed at a   lot of them. Eventually, I   began    to realize     that my results   had very little to do with  the goals I   set     and nearly    everything to do with the systems I followed.

What’s the difference between systems and goals?    It’s a     distinction I first learned  from Scott Adams,  the cartoonist behind     the Dilbert comic. Goals are about     the results   you want to     achieve. Systems are about the processes that lead to those     results.

 If    you’re    a   coach,    your goal might    be to win a championship. Your system   is  the way you recruit   players, manage your assistant coaches,    and conduct practice.

 If    you’re    an entrepreneur, your goal might    be to build a   milliondollar   business. Your system   is  how you test product ideas, hire employees, and run marketing campaigns.

 If    you’re    a   musician, your goal might    be to play a new piece.     Your system   is  how often you practice, how you break down and tackle difficult measures, and your method for receiving feedback from your instructor.

Now  for the interesting question: If  you completely ignored     your goals and focused  only on your system,  would    you     still succeed? For example,  if  you were a   basketball coach     and you ignored  your goal to win    a   championship and     focused  only on what your team does at practice each day, would     you still get results?

I think you would.

The   goal in any sport is  to finish with the best score,     but it  would    be ridiculous  to spend    the whole     game staring   at the scoreboard.    The only way to actually     win is  to get better    each day. In the words    of     three-time Super     Bowl winner   Bill Walsh,   “The score takes     care of itself.”    The same is  true for other areas of life. If     you want better    results,  then forget about     setting   goals.     Focus    on your system   instead.

What do I   mean by this? Are goals completely useless? Of     course not. Goals are good for setting   a   direction, but systems     are best for making progress. A  handful  of problems arise     when you spend    too much time thinking about     your goals     and not enough  time designing your systems.

Problem #1: Winners and losers    have the same     goals.

Goal setting   suffers   from a   serious  case of survivorship     bias. We concentrate on the people   who end up winning—the     survivors—and mistakenly assume  that ambitious goals led to     their success  while overlooking    all of the people   who     had the same objective but didn’t succeed.

Every Olympian wants    to win a   gold medal.   Every     candidate wants to get the job. And if  successful and     unsuccessful   people   share the same goals, then the goal cannot     be what differentiates  the winners from the losers.    It     wasn’t    the goal of winning the Tour de France   that propelled the British   cyclists  to the top of the sport.     Presumably,   they had wanted  to win the race every year     before—just    like every other professional   team. The goal had     always   been there.    It  was only when they implemented  a     system  of continuous small improvements that they achieved a     different outcome.

Problem #2: Achieving a  goal is  only a  momentary    change.

Imagine you have a   messy    room and you set a   goal to     clean it. If  you summon  the energy   to tidy up, then     you will have a   clean room—for now. But if  you maintain     the same sloppy,  pack-rat habits    that led to a messy     room in the first place,     soon you’ll be looking  at a     new pile of clutter and hoping   for another burst of     motivation. You’re   left chasing the same outcome because you     never changed the system   behind   it. You   treated  a     symptom without addressing the cause.

Achieving   a   goal only changes your life for the moment.     That’s    the counterintuitive thing about     improvement. We     think we need to change our results,  but the results   are     not the problem. What we really need to change  are the     systems that cause those results.  When    you solve problems at     the results   level, you only solve them temporarily.   In order to     improve for good, you need to solve problems at the systems level. Fix the inputs    and the outputs will fix themselves.

Problem #3: Goals    restrict   your happiness.

The implicit assumption    behind   any goal is  this: “Once    I     reach my goal, then I’ll be happy.” The problem with a     goals-first mentality is  that you’re continually putting  happiness off     until the next milestone. I’ve slipped into this trap so many times     I’ve lost count.    For years, happiness was always   something for     my future    self to enjoy.    I promised myself   that once I     gained   twenty   pounds  of muscle  or after my business     was featured in the New York Times,   then I   could finally relax.

Furthermore, goals create    an “either-or” conflict: either    you     achieve your   goal and are successful or you fail and you     are a   disappointment. You mentally box yourself into a     narrow  version  of happiness. This is misguided.  It  is     unlikely that your actual    path through life will match the     exact journey  you had in mind when you set out. It  makes     no sense to restrict  your satisfaction to one scenario when     there are many paths to success.

A systems-first  mentality provides the antidote. When    you     fall in love   with the process  rather    than the product,     you don’t have to wait to give   yourself permission to be     happy.   You can be satisfied anytime your  system   is     running. And a   system   can be successful in many different forms,   not just the one you first envision.

Problem #4: Goals    are at odds with long-term progress.

Finally,  a   goal-oriented  mind-set can create    a   “yo-yo”     effect.    Many runners work hard for months, but as soon as     they cross the finish line, they stop training. The race is  no     longer    there to motivate them.    When all of your hard     work is  focused  on a   particular goal, what is  left to push     you forward after you achieve  it? This is  why many people     find themselves reverting to their old habits    after accomplishing     a   goal.

The   purpose of setting   goals is  to win the game.     The purpose of building systems is  to continue playing     the game.    True long-term thinking  is  goal-less thinking.     It’s not about     any single accomplishment.    It  is  about     the cycle of endless  refinement and continuous improvement.     Ultimately, it  is  your commitment  to the process     that     will determine your progress.

A  SYSTEM OF ATOMIC HABITS

If  you’re    having   trouble  changing your habits,   the problem     isn’t you. The problem is  your system.  Bad habits    repeat     themselves again and again not because you don’t want to change,     but because you have the wrong system   for change.

You   do not rise to the level of your goals. You fall to     the level of your systems.

Focusing    on the overall   system,  rather    than a   single     goal, is  one of the     core themes  of this book. It  is     also one of the deeper   meanings behind the word atomic. By     now, you’ve    probably realized  that an atomic habit refers     to     a   tiny change, a   marginal gain, a   1   percent improvement. But atomic   habits    are not just any old habits,     however small. They are little habits    that are part of a     larger    system.  Just as atoms are the building blocks    of     molecules, atomic   habits    are the building    blocks    of     remarkable results.

Habits are like the atoms    of our lives. Each one is  a     fundamental unit     that contributes     to your overall     improvement. At first, these tiny routines   seem insignificant,     but soon they build on each other and fuel bigger wins that multiply     to a   degree   that far outweighs the cost of their  initial     investment.    They are both small and mighty. This is  the meaning of the phrase   atomic  habits—a regular  practice or     routine that    is  not only small and easy to do, but also     the source   of incredible power;    a   component of the     system   of compound growth.

Chapter Summary

 Habits are the compound interest of self-improvement.   Getting 1 percent better    every day counts   for a   lot in the long-run.

 Habits are a   double-edged  sword.   They can work for you or against    you, which    is  why understanding the details    is essential.

 Small changes often appear   to make no difference until you cross a   critical   threshold. The most powerful outcomes of any compounding    process  are delayed. You need to be patient.

 An  atomic   habit is  a   little habit that is  part of a larger    system.  Just as   atoms    are the building blocks of molecules, atomic   habits    are the   building blocks    of remarkable results.

 If    you want better    results,  then forget    about     setting goals. Focus on your system   instead.

 You do not rise to the level of your goals. You fall to the level of your  systems.

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