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๐ The Book in 3 Sentences
- Real change comes from the compound effects of hundreds of small decisions or habits that over time accumulate to produce remarkable results.
- To achieve our goals we need to first build systems made of single processes and habits that will take us to our goals.
- Habits are the compound interest of self-improvement – itโs the good and bad things that we do each and every day that compound over time to create real change.
๐จ Impressions
This book helped me understand the difference between systems and goals and why the former is more important. By making small habits a part of our identity we can over time get to our goals no matter how big or small they are.
๐ค Who Should Read It?
Thereโs really no limit to who should read Atomic Habits. Weโre all โmade ofโ habits therefore this book is inherently about our behaviours and what all of us do every day. That being said, youโll really enjoy this book if:
- You care about achieving your goals,
- You want to deliberately change your habits,
- You want to discover how habits are formed,
- You want to know how you can build systems that will support your goals.
โ๏ธ How the Book Changed Me
- It helped me build healthy habits like going to the gym or taking my supplements.
- From now on whenever I seek to change my behaviour I look inwards trying to change my identity first instead of starting with the desired outcome.
- I realised that systems are more important than goals since systems are what really takes us to our goals. (Remember – journey before destination – systems are like the journey and the goals are our destinations).
- I definitely notice much more of what I do each day. Every little thing – good or bad – becomes a habit over time that will compound and work for or against us depending on whether itโs positive or negative!
โ๏ธ My Top 3 Quotes
Success is the product of daily habitsโnot once-in-a-lifetime transformations.
Time magnifies the margin between success and failure. It will multiply whatever you feed it. Good habits make time your ally. Bad habits make time your enemy.
Goals are about the results you want to achieve. Systems are about the processes that lead to those results.
๐ Summary + Notes
๐ What are habits?
Habits are the compound interest of self-improvement.
And when we repeat 1% errors, day after day, through replicating poor decisions, duplicating tiny mistakes, and rationalising little excuses, our small choices compound into toxic results.
๐งโโ๏ธ There are 4 laws of behaviour change that we can use to create good habits and break the bad ones
A single habit is made of aย cue, craving, response, and reward. And these components are formed according to the 4 laws of behaviour change:
- Make it obviousย – the habit needs to be effortless for us and require no active thinking. For example, when I had a hard time remembering to take my Vitamin D pills. I realised that the problem was that I kept these pills on the other side of the kitchen. Once I put them in the obvious spot that I couldnโt miss, I started taking them more regularly.
- Make it attractiveย – if the habit is unattractive we likely wonโt have enough willpower to do it over and over. Therefore, you should come up with some ways to make the habit attractive even if itโs something hard like going to a gym or studying for long hours. For me, it was restricting my fantasy audiobooks listen-time to when I was at the gym which made the whole workout thing much more pleasurable.
- Make it easyย – the less friction there is between you and the habit, the greater the chances are that youโll actually do it. This applies to simple things like packing your gym bag a day before you want to go to the gym or preparing a healthy meal to make sure that you donโt order another takeaway.
- Make it immediately satisfyingย – our brain rewards immediate returns so itโs good to come up with something simple that brings us joy right after we perform our habit. Every time I go to the gym, I hop into a pool and spend 10 to 20 minutes in a spa. I know that it sounds a bit excessive but this little routine makes me much more optimistic about spending an hour or two in the gym.
โณ It takes time to build a habit or break a bad one and thatโs why most people quit halfway
Time magnifies the margin between success and failure. It will multiply whatever you feed it. Good habits make time your ally. Bad habits make time your enemy.
If you find yourself struggling to build a good habit or break a bad one, it is not because you have lost your ability to improve. Itโs often because youโve not yet crossed the Plateau of Latent Potential. Complaining about not achieving success despite working hard is like complaining about an ice cube not melting when you heated it from twenty-five to thirty-one degrees. Your work was not wasted, itโs just being stored. All the action happens at thirty-two degrees.
San Antonio Spurs, one of the most successful teams in NBA history, have a quote from social reformer Jacob Riis hanging in their locker room:
โWhen nothing seems to help, I go and look at a stonecutter hammering away at his rock, perhaps a hundred times without as much as a crack showing in it. Yet at the hundred and first blow it will split in two, and I know it was not that last blow that did itโbut all that had gone before.โ
โ๏ธ Adopt a systems-first approach instead of focusing on goals
Goals are about the results you want to achieve. Systems are about the processes that lead to those results.
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, โThe score takes care of itself.โ The same is true for other areas of life.
If you want better results, then forget about setting goals. Focus on your system instead.
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.
A systems-first mentality provides the antidote. When you fall in love with the process rather than the product, you donโt 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.
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. Itโs 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
You do not rise to the level of your goals. You fall to the level of your systems.
๐ช To form good habits, make them a part of your identity
Our habits should be a part of our identity and the starting point of building it. Most of us get this wrong – we start with outcomes and work backwards towards our identity. But when a habit comes from who we are, it serves as the best form of intrinsic motivation.
For example, I had to change my thinking regarding eating healthy. Before reading Atomic Habits I was thinking that if I want to reduce my belly fat, I must follow Tim Ferrissโ Slow Carb diet which will make me a healthy person (outcome -> identity).
But a correct identity-based approach would be for me to think that Iโm a healthy person therefore, as a healthy person, Iโll eat wholesome food and exercise regularly which will then lead to reduced belly fat (identity -> outcome).
Most people donโt even consider identity change when they set out to improve. They just think, โI want to be skinny (outcome) and if I stick to this diet, then Iโll be skinny (process).โ
They set goals and determine the actions they should take to achieve those goals without considering the beliefs that drive their actions.
They never shift the way they look at themselves, and they donโt realise that their old identity can sabotage their new plans for change. Behind every system of actions is a system of beliefs.
- The goal is not to read a book, the goal is to become a reader.
- The goal is not to run a marathon, the goal is to become a runner.
- The goal is not to learn an instrument, the goal is to become a musician.
Many people walk through life in a cognitive slumber, blindly following the norms attached to their identity.
- โIโm terrible with directions.โ
- โIโm not a morning person.โ
- โIโm bad at remembering peopleโs names.โ
- โIโm always late.โ
- โIโm not good with technology.โ
- โIโm horrible at math.โ โฆ and a thousand other variations.
When you have repeated a story to yourself for years, itโs easy to slide into these mental grooves and accept them as a fact.
Over the long run, however, the real reason you fail to stick with habits is that your self-image gets in the way. This is why you canโt get too attached to one version of your identity. Progress requires unlearning. Becoming the best version of yourself requires you to continuously edit your beliefs, and to upgrade and expand your identity.
Your identity emerges out of your habits. You are not born with preset beliefs. Every belief, including those about yourself, is learned and conditioned through experience.
More precisely, your habits are how you embody your identity. When you make your bed each day, you embody the identity of an organised person. When you write each day, you embody the identity of a creative person. When you train each day, you embody the identity of an athletic person.
Whatever your identity is right now, you only believe it because you have proof of it. If you go to church every Sunday for twenty years, you have evidence that you are religious. If you study biology for one hour every night, you have evidence that you are studious. If you go to the gym even when itโs snowing, you have evidence that you are committed to fitness. The more evidence you have for a belief, the more strongly you will believe it.
This is a gradual evolution. We do not change by snapping our fingers and deciding to be someone entirely new. We change bit by bit, day by day, habit by habit. We are continually undergoing microevolution of the self.
Each habit is like a suggestion: โHey, maybe this is who I am.โ If you finish a book, then perhaps you are the type of person who likes reading. If you go to the gym, then perhaps you are the type of person who likes exercise. If you practice playing the guitar, perhaps you are the type of person who likes music.
Every action you take is a vote for the type of person you wish to become.
Building better habits isnโt about littering your day with life hacks. Itโs not about flossing one tooth each night or taking a cold shower each morning or wearing the same outfit each day. Itโs not about achieving external measures of success like earning more money, losing weight, or reducing stress. Habits can help you achieve all of these things, but fundamentally they are not about having something. They are about becoming someone.
Ultimately, your habits matter because they help you become the type of person you wish to be. They are the channel through which you develop your deepest beliefs about yourself. Quite literally, you become your habits.
If youโre still having trouble determining how to rate a particular habit, here is a question I like to use: โDoes this behaviour help me become the type of person I wish to be? Does this habit cast a vote for or against my desired identity?โ Habits that reinforce your desired identity are usually good. Habits that conflict with your desired identity are usually bad.
Many people think they lack motivation when what they really lack is clarity. It is not always obvious when and where to take action.
โDisciplinedโ people are better at structuring their lives in a way that does not require heroic willpower and self-control. In other words, they spend less time in tempting situations.
The people with the best self-control are typically the ones who need to use it the least. Itโs easier to practice self-restraint when you donโt have to use it very often.6 So, yes, perseverance, grit, and willpower are essential to success, but the way to improve these qualities is not by wishing you were a more disciplined person, but by creating a more disciplined environment.
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, โThe best is the enemy of the good.โ
If the motion doesnโt 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 weโre making progress without running the risk of failure.
Most of us are experts at avoiding criticism. It doesnโt feel good to fail or to be judged publicly, so we tend to avoid situations where that might happen. And thatโs the biggest reason why you slip into motion rather than taking action: you want to delay failure. Itโs easy to be in motion and convince yourself that youโre still making progress. You think, โIโve got conversations going with four potential clients right now. This is good. Weโre moving in the right direction.โ Or, โI brainstormed some ideas for that book I want to write. This is coming together.โ Motion makes you feel like youโre getting things done. But really, youโre just preparing to get something done. When preparation becomes a form of procrastination, you need to change something. You donโt want to merely be planning. You want to be practising.
If you want to master a habit, the key is to start with repetition, not perfection. You donโt need to map out every feature of a new habit. You just need to practice. This is the first takeaway of the 3rd Law: you just need to get your reps in.
The greater the obstacleโthat is, the more difficult the habitโthe more friction there is between you and your desired end state. This is why it is crucial to make your habits so easy that youโll do them even when you donโt feel like it. If you can make your good habits more convenient, youโll be more likely to follow through on them.
Certainly, you are capable of doing very hard things. The problem is that some days you feel like doing the hard work and some days you feel like giving in. On tough days, itโs crucial to have as many things working in your favour as possible so that you can overcome the challenges life naturally throws your way. The less friction you face, the easier it is for your stronger self to emerge.
โWhen I walk into a room everything is in its right place,โ Nuckols wrote. โBecause I do this every day in every room, stuff always stays in good shape โฆ. People think I work hard but Iโm actually really lazy. Iโm just proactively lazy. It gives you so much time back.โ
We are more likely to repeat a behaviour when the experience is satisfying. This is entirely logical. Feelings of pleasureโeven minor ones like washing your hands with soap that smells nice and lathers wellโare signals that tell the brain: โThis feels good. Do this again, next time.โ Pleasure teaches your brain that a behaviour is worth remembering and repeating.
Every habit produces multiple outcomes across time. Unfortunately, these outcomes are often misaligned. With our bad habits, the immediate outcome usually feels good, but the ultimate outcome feels bad. With good habits, it is the reverse: the immediate outcome is unenjoyable, but the ultimate outcome feels good. The French economist Frรฉdรฉric Bastiat explained the problem clearly when he wrote, โIt almost always happens that when the immediate consequence is favourable, the later consequences are disastrous, and vice versaโฆ Often, the sweeter the first fruit of a habit, the more bitter are its later fruits.โ
Put another way, the costs of your good habits are in the present. The costs of your bad habits are in the future.
The brainโs tendency to prioritise the present moment means you canโt rely on good intentions. When you make a planโto lose weight, write a book, or learn a languageโyou are actually making plans for your future self. And when you envision what you want your life to be like, it is easy to see the value in taking actions with long-term benefits. We all want better lives for our future selves. However, when the moment of decision arrives, instant gratification usually wins. You are no longer making a choice for Future You, who dreams of being fitter or wealthier or happier. You are choosing for Present You, who wants to be full, pampered, and entertained. As a general rule, the more immediate pleasure you get from an action, the more strongly you should question whether it aligns with your long-term goals.
Hereโs the problem: most people know that delaying gratification is the wise approach. They want the benefits of good habits: to be healthy, productive, at peace. But these outcomes are seldom top-of-mind at the decisive moment. Thankfully, itโs possible to train yourself to delay gratificationโbut you need to work with the grain of human nature, not against it. The best way to do this is to add a little bit of immediate pleasure to the habits that pay off in the long run and a little bit of immediate pain to ones that donโt.
The vital thing in getting a habit to stick is to feel successfulโeven if itโs in a small way. The feeling of success is a signal that your habit paid off and that the work was worth the effort. In a perfect world, the reward for a good habit is the habit itself. In the real world, good habits tend to feel worthwhile only after they have provided you with something. Early on, itโs all sacrifice. Youโve gone to the gym a few times, but youโre not stronger or fitter or fasterโat least, not in any noticeable sense. Itโs only months later, once you shed a few pounds or your arms gain some definition, that it becomes easier to exercise for its own sake. In the beginning, you need a reason to stay on track. This is why immediate rewards are essential. They keep you excited while the delayed rewards accumulate in the background.
Immediate reinforcement can be especially helpful when dealing with habits of avoidance, which are behaviours you want to stop doing. It can be challenging to stick with habits like โno frivolous purchasesโ or โno alcohol this monthโ because nothing happens when you skip happy hour drinks or donโt buy that pair of shoes. It can be hard to feel satisfied when there is no action in the first place. All youโre doing is resisting temptation, and there isnโt much satisfying about that.
One solution is to turn the situation on its head. You want to make avoidance visible. Open a savings account and label it for something you wantโmaybe โLeather Jacket.โ Whenever you pass on a purchase, put the same amount of money in the account. Skip your morning latte? Transfer $5. Pass on another month of Netflix? Move $10 over. Itโs like creating a loyalty program for yourself. The immediate reward of seeing yourself save money toward the leather jacket feels a lot better than being deprived. You are making it satisfying to do nothing.
It is worth noting that it is important to select short-term rewards that reinforce your identity rather than ones that conflict with it. Buying a new jacket is fine if youโre trying to lose weight or read more books, but it doesnโt work if youโre trying to budget and save money. Instead, taking a bubble bath or going on a leisurely walk are good examples of rewarding yourself with free time, which aligns with your ultimate goal of more freedom and financial independence. Similarly, if your reward for exercising is eating a bowl of ice cream, then youโre casting votes for conflicting identities, and it ends up being a wash. Instead, maybe your reward is a massage, which is both a luxury and a vote toward taking care of your body. Now the short-term reward is aligned with your long-term vision of being a healthy person.
Eventually, as intrinsic rewards like a better mood, more energy, and reduced stress kick in, youโll become less concerned with chasing the secondary reward. The identity itself becomes the reinforcer. You do it because itโs who you are and it feels good to be you. The more a habit becomes part of your life, the less you need outside encouragement to follow through. Incentives can start a habit. Identity sustains a habit.
In summary, a habit needs to be enjoyable for it to last. Simple bits of reinforcementโlike soap that smells great or toothpaste that has a refreshing mint flavour or seeing $50 hit your savings accountโcan offer the immediate pleasure you need to enjoy a habit. And change is easy when it is enjoyable.
โDonโt break the chainโ is a powerful mantra. Donโt break the chain of sales calls and youโll build a successful book of business. Donโt break the chain of workouts and youโll get fit faster than youโd expect. Donโt break the chain of creating every day and you will end up with an impressive portfolio.
The first mistake is never the one that ruins you. It is the spiral of repeated mistakes that follows. Missing once is an accident. Missing twice is the start of a new habit.
You donโt realise how valuable it is to just show up on your bad (or busy) days. Lost days hurt you more than successful days help you. If you start with $100, then a 50 percent gain will take you to $150. But you only need a 33 percent loss to take you back to $100. In other words, avoiding a 33 percent loss is just as valuable as achieving a 50 percent gain. As Charlie Munger says, โThe first rule of compounding: Never interrupt it unnecessarily.โ
This is why the โbadโ workouts are often the most important ones. Sluggish days and bad workouts maintain the compound gains you accrued from previous good days. Simply doing somethingโten squats, five sprints, a push-up, anything reallyโis huge. Donโt put up a zero. Donโt let losses eat into your compounding.
Furthermore, itโs not always about what happens during the workout. Itโs about being the type of person who doesnโt miss workouts. Itโs easy to train when you feel good, but itโs crucial to show up when you donโt feel like itโeven if you do less than you hope. Going to the gym for five minutes may not improve your performance, but it reaffirms your identity.
The secret to maximising your odds of success is to choose the right field of competition. This is just as true with habit change as it is with sports and business. Habits are easier to perform and more satisfying to stick with when they align with your natural inclinations and abilities. Like Michael Phelps in the pool or Hicham El Guerrouj on the track, you want to play a game where the odds are in your favour.
When you canโt win by being better, you can win by being different. By combining your skills, you reduce the level of competition, which makes it easier to stand out. You can shortcut the need for a genetic advantage (or for years of practice) by rewriting the rules. A good player works hard to win the game everyone else is playing. A great player creates a new game that favours their strengths and avoids their weaknesses.
โAt some point it comes down to who can handle the boredom of training every day, doing the same lifts over and over and over.โ
People talk about getting โamped upโ to work on their goals. Whether itโs business or sports or art, you hear people say things like, โIt all comes down to passion.โ Or, โYou have to really want it.โ As a result, many of us get depressed when we lose focus or motivation because we think that successful people have some bottomless reserve of passion. But this coach was saying that really successful people feel the same lack of motivation as everyone else. The difference is that they still find a way to show up despite the feelings of boredom.
As Machiavelli noted, โMen desire novelty to such an extent that those who are doing well wish for a change as much as those who are doing badly.โ
I can guarantee that if you manage to start a habit and keep sticking to it, there will be days when you feel like quitting. When you start a business, there will be days when you donโt feel like showing up. When youโre at the gym, there will be sets that you donโt feel like finishing. When itโs time to write, there will be days that you donโt feel like typing. But stepping up when itโs annoying or painful or draining to do so, thatโs what makes the difference between a professional and an amateur.
Professionals stick to the schedule; amateurs let life get in the way. Professionals know what is important to them and work toward it with purpose; amateurs get pulled off course by the urgencies of life.
David Cain, an author and meditation teacher, encourages his students to avoid being โfair-weather meditators.โ Similarly, you donโt want to be a fair-weather athlete or a fair-weather writer or a fair-weather anything. When a habit is truly important to you, you have to be willing to stick to it in any mood. Professionals take action even when the mood isnโt right. They might not enjoy it, but they find a way to put the reps in.
There have been a lot of sets that I havenโt felt like finishing, but Iโve never regretted doing the workout. There have been a lot of articles I havenโt felt like writing, but Iโve never regretted publishing on schedule. There have been a lot of days Iโve felt like relaxing, but Iโve never regretted showing up and working on something that was important to me.
If you’d like to check out more of my Book Summaries, you might find these interesting.
- “Happy” – Derren Brownย – it’s one of my all-time favourites
- “The Magic of Thinking Big” – David Swartzย – itโs about being a doer, not a donโt-er
And if you haven’t checked out my Book Club over on YouTube before –ย the playlist lives here.