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  • Do you ever feel like you're just floating through  

  • life...but not actually getting closer  to the person that you want to be.

  • It usually happens around New years, you imagine  all the bad habits your going to break free from,  

  • and all the good habits you will begin.

  • This time it will be different”  you say to yourself. This time I  

  • AM going to do the things that I say I will.

  • Only to end up back where you began shortly  after and no closer to what you had envisaged.

  • So the question is, how do you become the person  you dream of becoming? How do you break free  

  • from bad habits and make the habits  you desire easier and automatic?

  • Atomic Habits by James Clear  answers all these questions.

  • We are going to be doing a detailed visual summary  of this book, And dive deep into topics like

  • Habit loops Dopamine spikes 

  • Priming your environment Plus heaps more

  • And make sure to stick around until the  end of the video where we tie everything  

  • together from the video and I go step by  step through how I've personally been using  

  • this book with my own habits and how you  can start applying it to your own habits.

  • I hope this summary inspires you to go out  and grab a copy of the book for yourself  

  • because this book deservesspace on everyone's bookshelf!

  • Let's jump into it

  • Imagine a plane taking off and  travelling from New York to Los Angeles.  

  • Just before takeoff you adjust the  plane just slightly by 3 degrees  

  • or around 80 inches. If you kept flying in  a straight line...You would end up closer  

  • to Tijuana in Mexico than in your  intended destination of Los Angeles.

  • The same goes for our habitsTiny changes in our habits  

  • can change the trajectory of our lives  in ways that we can't even notice  

  • until many years into the future looking backIn both good ways and bad. You are your habits.

  • The Power of Atomic Habits

  • “A slight change in your daily habits can guide  your life to a very different destination”.

  • Massive action Vs 1% improvements

  • Far too often, we convince ourselves that massive  success is only possible through massive action  

  • in any goal we are pursuing. We expect  ourselves to make some quantum leap or  

  • momentous improvement that  will gain others attention.

  • However it is the tiny improvementsthat aren't even noticeable at first,  

  • that create incredible change.

  • Let's look deeper into the Math

  • 1% better every day for a year will  compound to nearly 38 times better.

  • 1% worse every day for overyear will bring you close to zero!

  • Your habits can compound against you in the form  of things like stress or negative self-talk.

  • Or they can compound for you in  the form of things like knowledge,  

  • productivity, skills and relationships.

  • Success is the product of  daily habitsnot once-in 

  • a lifetime transformations

  • The Truth About progress

  • When you start any endeavour in your life, here  is what we think should happen. Linear progress.

  • Here is what actually happens. Notice  this section here. In the beginning,  

  • small changes in our progress  are not even noticeable.

  • James Clear refers to this part of the  graph asthe valley of disappointment”  

  • You've done so much! Put in so much  effort and you can barely see any results!  

  • This is where most people fail and  slip back into their old routines.

  • The most powerful outcomes of any compounding  process are delayed so Patience is required.

  • Goals Vs Systems.

  • FORGET ABOUT GOALS, FOCUS ON SYSTEMS INSTEAD

  • A goal is the result you want  to accomplish. Systems deal  

  • with the processes that lead to results.

  • The conventional wisdom suggests that the best  way to achieve anything we want in life-getting  

  • into better shape, building a successful business,  

  • spending more time with family is  to set specific, realistic goals.

  • But if you completely ignored your  goals and focused only on your system,  

  • would you still succeed?

  • The Author argues that you would.

  • Here are some problems with only having goals. Successful and unsuccessful people share the  

  • same goals, so therefore the goal can not  be what differentiates winners from losers

  • Achieving a goal only changes  your life for a moment in time

  • Goals can create an either-or conflictEither you achieve the goal and succeed,  

  • or you don't and you are a failure. Even if  you were making progress in the right direction 

  • When you achieve a goal, what do you do afterIf your goal was running the local marathon,  

  • chances are after completing ityour motivation will quickly fade  

  • and you will just slip back  into your old routines.

  • Goals are good for setting a directionbut systems are best for making progress

  • A SYSTEM OF ATOMIC HABITS

  • The problem with changing your habits is not youThe reason why you repeat the same bad habit for  

  • so long isn't because you don't want to changebut because you have the wrong system for change.

  • Atomic habits are small routines and behaviors  that accumulate to produce incremental positive  

  • outcomes over time. Big breakthroughs tend to  get more attention than small improvements.  

  • But what really matters are the little  daily decisions and actions we take.

  • Just as atoms are the  building blocks of molecules,  

  • atomic habits are the building  blocks of remarkable results”.

  • There are 3 layers to behavior change.

  • The first layer is changing outcomes.The  result. Losing that weight, writing that book,  

  • winning the season. The outcomes are what you get

  • The Second layer is changing  your process. What you do.  

  • The new workout routinedeveloping a daily reading habit.

  • And the third layer is changing  your identity. What you believe.  

  • Your worldviews and how you  think about yourself and others.

  • Most people focus on the outcomes but  the best way to change your habits  

  • is by focusing on the person you want to  become instead of the results you want.

  • The goal isn't to learn an instrumentit is to become a musician.

  • The goal isn't to run a marathonIt is to become a runner.

  • When something you want in your  life becomes part of your identity,  

  • that is when your behaviors will naturally change.

  • When you tell yourself and others “I'm a  runner”. You want to live up to that identity.

  • Remind yourself

  • Every Time you do a workout, you are an athlete

  • Every time you write a line  of code, you are a coder

  • Each time you instruct your  team, you are a leader.

  • The Habit Loop A habit is when  

  • something has been repeated enough  times that it becomes automatic.  

  • Ultimately we want our habits to solve problems  in our lives with the least amount of effort.

  • A habit is formed and reinforced by  means of a continuous feedback loop:  

  • Cue + Craving + Response + RewardThe key to creating habits that stick  

  • is to create feedback loops that  are continuously being improved.

  • Cue. Phone buzz. CravingWant to know who messaged.  

  • Response. Pick up phone. RewardSolve the problem of who messaged.

  • Cue. Mind goes blank at work. CravingWant to alleviate the frustration.  

  • Response. Check social media. RewardSatisfied the need to feel less frustrated

  • Over time, rewards become associated with cues.

  • So, in this example, checking social media  becomes tied to your mind going blank at work.

  • And then checking Facebook may be the cue to check  Instagram, which becomes the cue to check YouTube.

  • And before you know it, your mind going blank  cue has led to 20 minutes of wasted time.

  • And you more you repeat these habit loopsthe stronger and more automatic they become.

  • Cues can really be anything. A smell, a  sound a sight, a person, a location etc.

  • Try to think of any cues in your daily life that  are initiating your good or bad habit loops.

  • So how can we influence the  habit loop to work for us?

  • This book shows us the 4 laws that  will guide us to do just that.

  • Law 1 Make it obvious

  • Most of your current habits are so automatic that  you don't even realize them. You must first become  

  • aware of your habits before you can change themYou can achieve that with your Habit Scorecard.

  • Write down all your daily  behaviors on a habits scorecard,  

  • from the moment you wake up  until the moment you go to bed.

  • Your scorecard may look something like this.

  • Based on whether it helps you  become the person you aspire to be,  

  • categorize each habit as positive  (+), negative (-), or neutral (=).

  • At this stage we aren't trying to change anything,  

  • just observe what is actually  going on in our daily lives.

  • Until you make the unconscious consciousit will direct your life and you will call  

  • it fate.” Carl Yung

  • Vagueness is a real problem when it comes to habit  formation, and studies have shown that quite often  

  • the reason people fail to stick to a habit  is not because of a lack of motivation,  

  • but because of a lack of clarity. “One day, I  will get into shapeis easy to say to yourself  

  • but too vague to get any momentumWhat you need is a time and a place.

  • The most common cuestime and  locationwill help you achieve your goals.  

  • Clearly state your intention to  act using the following formula:

  • I will behavior at time in this location.

  • Here is a bad example,

  • “I will read more this month

  • Here is a good example

  • “I will read a book for 15 minutes  daily at 6am in the spare bedroom”.

  • Another good way to get a habit  started is by Habit stacking.  

  • To stack habits, tie a desired habit to an  existing habit according to the following formula:

  • After [current habit], I will [new habit]”.

  • For example,

  • After I brush my teeth, I  will stretch for 5 minutes”.  

  • You can stack habits together, for example  after you finish brushing your teeth,  

  • you will meditate for 10 minutes, then plan the  rest of your day, before checking social media.

  • A “chain of habitsis more likely to be  sustained if you practice this consistently.  

  • Choosing the correct trigger is  essential. YOU NEED A TRIGGER CUE

  • Your trigger should be;

  • something that you do automatically  without fail during your day,  

  • such as waking up, turning off  your alarm or brushing your teeth.

  • James Clear tells us in the book  that Motivation is highly overrated.  

  • You can better shape your behavior  by designing your environment

  • We are more influenced by our environment  than our willpower or motivation

  • It's hard to stick to positive  habits in a negative environment.

  • Environment is the invisible hand  that shapes human behavior.”  

  • Creating a habit requires you to redesign  the space around you (home/work) to 

  • 1 - make it easier to see the  cues for the desired habits and 

  • 2 - avert bad habits by making them invisible.

  • If you want to drink more water, make the cues  visible and obvious. Place water bottles around  

  • the house in places you are likely to see themWant to read more? place the book somewhere you  

  • will see it. If you want to get better on the  guitar, don't leave it out of sight in a closet.

  • CONTEXT IS THE CUE

  • Objects in the environment do not determine our  behavior; rather, it is our relationship to them  

  • that does. Stop seeing your environment  as a place simply filled with objects.  

  • Imagine it as a place filled with relationships. The couch in the living room is the place where  

  • one person reads an hour a night. For another, the  couch is where they watch Netflix and eat pizza  

  • and relax after work. If your relationship  with the couch is a place to relax,  

  • then trying to get a work related task  done in that environment may be difficult.

  • Try to make separate zones in your  house for different activities.  

  • The author likes to use the  mantraOne space, One use

  • If you are trying to eliminate a bad habit, You  can only rely on self-control in the short-term.  

  • Cutting off bad habits at the source is a more  reliable solution and one of the most practical  

  • ways to eliminate a bad habit is to make it  invisible. Eliminate it from your environment.

  • For example

  • Put your phone in another room for a few  hours if you have trouble getting work done

  • Put junk food out of sight or remove it from  your house if you are trying to lose weight.

  • Law 2

  • Making it Attractive

  • When we expect to be rewarded, we take  action. The more rewarding an action is,  

  • the more likely we are to repeat  it until it becomes a habit.  

  • Hence, the first step to forming good  habits is to make them more attractive.

  • Understanding how dopamine  affects your body will help you

  • DOPAMINE & FEEDBACK LOOPS

  • Our motivation levels are affected by dopamine,  a hormone and neurotransmitter. We are more  

  • motivated to act when our dopamine  levels rise. By measuring dopamine,  

  • scientists can pinpoint the exact moment at  which a craving occurs. It was once assumed  

  • that dopamine was just about pleasure, but now we  know it's vital to many neurological functions,  

  • including motivation, memory, learningpunishment as well as voluntary movement.

  • Gambling addicts have a dopamine spike right  before they place a bet, not after they win”.

  • Let's dive deeper into dopamine spikes.

  • Using social media, eating junk food  and taking drugs are all associated  

  • with high levels of dopamine  and are highly habit forming.

  • The hormone dopamine is released not  only when we experience pleasure,  

  • but also when we anticipate it. Think about before going on a vacation.

  • Sometimes the thinking and anticipation of the  vacation is better than the actual vacation.

  • Seeing the junk food you desire  surges dopamine, not after eating it

  • Drug addicts increase dopamine when they  see the drugs, not after taking them.

  • The craving is what causes us to  take action in the first place.

  • Making our habits attractive is vital because  it is the expectation of a rewarding experience  

  • that drives us to act. Here, you  can use a strategy known as….

  • Temptation bundling

  • The temptation bundling process makes a habit more  attractive by combining an action we need to do  

  • with one we want to do. For example  you could bundle watching Netflix  

  • (something you want to do) with  working out (something you need to do).

  • Temptation bundling applies a psychology  principle known as Premack's Principle.

  • Developed by professor David Premackthe Premack principle states,

  • "More probable behaviors will  reinforce less probable behaviors."

  • In other words, even if you're not  looking forward to doing some exercise,  

  • you'll become conditioned to do it because  you get to do something else you really enjoy.

  • Group Influence

  • We are continually wondering "What will others  

  • think of me?" and altering our  behavior based on the answer.”

  • We are influenced by the people closest  to us, and the groups we belong to.

  • If you are trying to build a new habitone of the best ways to reinforce the habit  

  • is to find and become part ofculture where that habit is the norm.

  • If you want to get into better shapesurround yourself with fit people.

  • If you want to read more, join a book club.

  • Primal motivators : The source of cravings

  • In your normal everyday life you  wouldn't say something to yourself like  

  • “I want to eat this pizza becauseneed to consume this food to survive

  • Surface level cravings are merely  manifestations of our deeper underlying motives.  

  • And these underlying motives guide our behavior.

  • Here are some examples of underlying motives:

  • Conserving energy 

  • Obtaining food and water Finding love and reproducing 

  • Connecting and bonding with others Winning social acceptance and approval 

  • Reducing uncertainty Achieving status and prestige

  • Your brain did not evolve with a desire to smoke  cigarettes, check Instagram every 5 minutes or to  

  • play video games. Online platforms and products  do not invent new motivations, but rather appeal  

  • to the underlying motives of human nature  that we already have to gain our attention.

  • Your habits are modern-day  solutions to ancient desires.  

  • New versions of old vices. The underlying  motives behind human nature remain the same

  • People who have the underlying motive of  connecting with others may jump onto Facebook,  

  • others seeking the underlying motive of finding  love and reproducing may sign up for Tinder.  

  • Reducing uncertainty, there's Google for thatSeeking social acceptance, there is Instagram.

  • Reprogramming your brain to enjoy hard habits

  • You can make hard habits more attractive if you  

  • can learn to associate them  with a positive experience.”

  • By highlighting the benefits ofhabit rather than its downsides,  

  • you can quickly reprogram your mind and  make it seem more appealing. For example,

  • Fitness = health and wellbeing and not fatigue

  • Cleaning the house = an environment conducive  to peace of mind and not wasted time

  • Saving money = future financial  freedom and not sacrifice.

  • These subtle shifts in mindset  aren't magic, but they can  

  • change your feelings toward  some habits or situations.

  • Make it Unattractive.

  • To break a bad habit, do the same but  highlight the benefits of NOT doing that habit  

  • to make it as unattractive  to keep doing as possible.

  • Law 3 - Make it Easy

  • How long does it actually  take to form a new habit?

  • During habit formation, a behavior becomes  increasingly automatic as it is repeated. As  

  • you repeat an activity, your brain changes  in order to become more efficient at it.  

  • Long before neuroscientists dug  into the process of forming habits,  

  • repetition was known as a powerful tool for  establishing habits. You activate particular  

  • neural circuits associated with habits  every time you repeat them. So framing habit  

  • formation in terms of time is flawed. It should  be framed in terms of the number of repetitions.

  • Reducing Friction : The Law of Least Effort

  • The more energy required, the less likely it is  to happen. It takes almost no energy to get into  

  • the habit of reading one page of a book each  day. Habits are more likely to occur when they  

  • require less energy. The bigger the obstaclethe more friction there is between you and the  

  • desired outcome. If you need to travel 20  minutes out of your way to go to the gym,  

  • chances are you will not. If your gym is located  on your commute to work, you will greatly decrease  

  • the friction. By making your good habits more  convenient, you're more likely to stick to them.

  • Your life will be easier if you  find ways to reduce friction  

  • rather than trying to solve it. In order to build  better habits, we have to find ways to reduce  

  • friction associated with our good habits and  increase friction associated with our bad habits

  • Prime the environment for use

  • By automating or setting up your environmentyou can reduce the friction for future action,  

  • e.g. “I will lay out my workout clothes at night  so I can get up and get moving in the morning.”

  • Or to prepare a healthier breakfastplace the pan on the stove,  

  • and gather the ingredients the night  before. Again to reduce any friction.

  • Using the Two-Minute Rule to Stop Procrastinating

  • Using the "2-minute rule" can help you  establish small habits that will lead  

  • to habit momentum and success in bigger goals. Find a simple, 2-minute version of your desired  

  • habit. You want to scale down your desired  outcome. Running a marathon becomes putting  

  • on your shoes and stretching for 2 minutesReading an hour per day becomes reading one  

  • page. You need to get the routine anchored in  place and then slowly build up the difficulty.

  • After you have mastered the 2-minute  habit, you can progress to the next phase;

  • To make something more difficult,  

  • think about ways you can create barriers of  friction between yourself and the bad habit.

  • Make it as impractical as possible.

  • If you want to watch less TVunplug the TV after each use  

  • and put the remote in an inconvenient location.

  • When you go shopping, leave your  credit cards under the seat of your car  

  • if you have a bad habit of spontaneous spending.

  • Do anything you can to make your  Bad habits less likely to occur.

  • Law 4 -Make it satisfying

  • The most important rule of behavior change

  • A feeling of pleasure is a message to the brain:  

  • "This feels good. Let's repeat this next  time." When you experience pleasure,  

  • your brain learns that a behavior  is worth remembering and repeating.

  • "What is immediately rewarded is repeated. What is immediately punished is avoided".

  • The first Three habits increase your  chances of doing the habit this time.  

  • The last law increases your chances  of repeating the habit next time.

  • The Mismatch between immediate and delayed returns

  • It is common for us to feel good about  our immediate results, but bad about  

  • our long-term outcomes when we practice bad  habits. It is the opposite with good habits:  

  • the immediate result is unpleasantbut the ultimate outcome is satisfying.

  • A certain amount of success in  just about every field involves  

  • ignoring an immediate reward for a long-term one.

  • It is best to add a little immediate pleasure  to the habits that will pay off in the long run  

  • and a little pain to those that won't.

  • How to stick with good habits everyday

  • QUOTEThe vital thing  

  • in getting a habit to stick is to feel  successfuleven if it's in a small way.  

  • The feeling of success is a signal that your habit  paid off and that the work was worth the effort.”

  • It is satisfying to make progress, and you can  monitor your progress using visual measures,  

  • such as moving paper clips, hairpins, or  marbles. Theselittle winscan go a long way.  

  • For example, for each sales call you make todaymove a marble from one jar to the complete jar.  

  • For Each 25 minutes of writing, move a paperclip

  • Visual measurements can take  many forms: diet journals,  

  • workout logs, download progress  bars, or even page numbers in a book.

  • Keeping a habit tracker may be the  best method to monitor your progress.

  • Using a habit tracker is a simple way to determine  whether you did a particular habit.

  • How to recover quickly when your habits break down

  • In spite of your best efforts, it is inevitable  that life will interrupt you at some point.

  • A bad day at work, a bad performanceor a bad workout can happen to anyone.

  • When you're having a bad day, you don't  realize how valuable it is to just show up.

  • Lost days hurt you more than  successful days help you.”

  • Don't break the chain of continuity. Missing twice  is the start of a bad habit; never do it. On a bad  

  • day, it's better to do 10 sit ups (instead  of your normal 50) than not do them at all.

  • Breaking a bad habit: Make it Unsatisfying

  • How an accountability partner  can change everything.

  • A behavior is less likely to  occur when pain is immediate.

  • Being held accountable by a partner is a good  way to keep your desired habits in check.  

  • We all want to be liked and respected, so  we would rather just avoid the punishment.

  • For example - I owe you $10  every time I miss a workout,  

  • plus the respect I lose for  failing to do what I said I would!

  • Behavior is more likely to be influenced  by concrete, and immediate consequences.

  • The Habit Contract

  • You can create a habit contract  to hold yourself accountable,  

  • just as governments use laws  to hold citizens accountable.

  • You can create a habit contract either  verbally or in writing, which makes it  

  • clear that you will honor a particular habit and  that there will be punishments if you do not.

  • You can then use your accountability  partners to enforce that contract.

  • Ok so it's one thing to read a book, but  another to actually apply it to your life.

  • So i'm going to try and visually  represent how I have personally  

  • been using this book to build systems  around my habits the past few months.  

  • After you read the book maybe your approach will  be different than mine or better, or maybe there  

  • are some parts I completely missed or could  improve upon so do let me know in the comments.

  • The Good habits I wanted to develop were  more consistent workout and reading routines.

  • The Bad habit I wanted to eliminate was becoming  distracted and overconsuming social media

  • First I completed the Habit scorecard. This gave  me a good idea of habits I could try to eliminate,  

  • but more importantly it gave me  an idea of daily habits I was  

  • already doing that I could  stack my new habits with.

  • Ultimately, when you find the habits you  want to work on. you want to be pushing  

  • Desired good habits towards this side of the  spectrum, and bad habits towards this side.

  • For the working out habit.

  • The first step was to make the cues more obviousand I had a few tools I could use from the book.  

  • In this case I used what James Clear  calls the implementation strategy.

  • I will workout at 6am in the living room.

  • Next I tried as best I could to design my  environment conducive to this new habit.  

  • I took my dumbbell set out of the  closet, and put them in the living room.  

  • I also found a few pictures of  healthy physiques on the internet  

  • and put them in places around the house  as cues that would remind me of the habit.

  • Next, I moved on to the craving phase.

  • To increase dopamine and motivationbundle the workout with listening to  

  • some of my favorite podcasts. I also implement  reprogramming my brain. I tell myself repeatedly  

  • I don't “have to do a workoutbut that “ I  get to build strength and a healthier body”  

  • That subtle shift in mindset has gone a long way.

  • Ideally, joining a gym, or findinggroup to workout with would be even better  

  • to strengthen this habitbut unfortunately all gyms  

  • are closed where I live, so I'm kind of  on my own for now with these two tools.

  • Next, making it easy.

  • Using the 2 minute rule, to make  sure I don't end up like most people  

  • starting a new habit, that  try to do too much too soon.  

  • I want my habit to not feel like a challenge  at all. My 2 minute rule was putting on my  

  • workout clothes and stretching. If that was the  only thing I accomplished then that was fine,  

  • because I showed up. But you will quickly find  that once you are there, you are now motivated to  

  • get the workout done. It is weird but the  motivation seems to come after you get started.

  • My mindset is focused on small 1 percent  changes compounding into meaningful results  

  • AND that my systems will get me to the resultsnot vague goals. Remembering that my main focus  

  • at this point is just making sure I show  up and start anchoring this habit in place.  

  • Once you are consistently showing  up, increase the progression.

  • To decrease friction, I made the rule  that I'm not allowed to check my phone  

  • until the workout was complete. If I get  distracted by emails or social media,  

  • It is one excuse and one step of friction  between myself and the workout getting completed.

  • Lastly, this was a game changer for mepriming the environment. When I place my shoes,  

  • yoga mat and dumbbells out the night beforeskyrocket my show up and workout percentage.  

  • As soon as I place these  items out the night before,  

  • I feel like the ritual has begun and the workout  is already complete because I have zero excuses.

  • So with those 3 phases of the loop  systemized to get me to show up.

  • I only had the last phase of the loop left to  tackle. To make sure I keep repeating the habit.

  • I use both of these tools somewhat  together to close out the loop.  

  • I use a habit tracker, crossing the  day off the calendar becomes the reward  

  • and it forces me to not want to break  the chain. I also take a of picture of  

  • the calories I burnt and send the picture  to my partner, and that feels satisfying.

  • Mindset wise, I begin with identity andremind myself after each workout that “I  

  • want to become the kind of person that enjoys  fitness and doesn't miss workouts” I don't  

  • put all my focus on outcomes such as I want  to be 10kg lighter by such and such a date.

  • I also remind myself that I need to  be patient for results and that I'm  

  • probably still somewhere in this Valley of  disappointment before I will see results!

  • So that is my personal  system for morning workouts.

  • I went through the same process with the  reading habit, with a few minor changes.

  • I used the habit stack. After [making  a coffee] I will [read for 90 minutes]  

  • making a coffee was my trigger cue for reading.

  • My one space one use rule was reading on  the balcony of my apartment.

  • One of the best parts of my day  is a nice cup of coffee in the  

  • morning. So this was the perfect  thing to bundle the habit with.

  • Remembering how dopamine raises in anticipation  of a reward and not the reward itself. I wanted  

  • this dopamine spike for wanting coffee to  start becoming associated with reading.

  • My 2 minute rule was to read 1 page of The  Daily Stoic by Ryan Holiday. Super simple,  

  • again in the beginning all I was concerned  with was showing up and getting this habit  

  • anchored. Then I slowly built up  the habit to around 90 minutes.

  • For the bad habit I was trying to eliminate

  • To make the habit invisible, I started  by making my phone as boring as possible,  

  • which required deleting a lot of apps.

  • I use the reprogramming tool, to  highlight the unattractive side of  

  • overconsuming social media. Telling myself  things like… … consuming is the easy and  

  • lazy option of the masses ,producing  things is difficult but rewarding. Do I  

  • want to be a consumer or a producer? Random  scrolling through feeds is for losers. So  

  • try to paint your bad habit in a light that  makes it super unattractive to keep doing.

  • To increase friction, I left my phone out of  sight whilst working in a drawer in another room.

  • To make it unsatisfying, I have an accountability  partner, I get my partner to enforce this  

  • habit. The punishment is If she sees me using  social media during work time, I owe her $10.

  • So that is how I have been using this  fantastic book guys with great results  

  • so far, and I hope this summary has helped you to  better understand the concepts within this book.

  • Go out and grab a copy of this book if you  haven't already, you are going to take in the  

  • knowledge at a much deeper level, from all the  stories and examples that James Clear goes over  

  • some advanced techniques, not in this summary  that will help you strengthen your habits.

  • Thankyou for watching. See you in the next video.

Do you ever feel like you're just floating through  

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How to become 37.78 times better at anything | Atomic Habits summary (by James Clear)

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    bbetterman に公開 2022 年 03 月 19 日
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