The Dr. Hyman Show - Make Behavior Change Stick with BJ Fogg

Episode Date: December 31, 2021

This episode is sponsored by Rupa Health and Athletic Greens.   We’ve all been there—changing an old habit or creating a new one can be challenging. But when we use science to understand the secr...ets to lasting behavior change, it’s clear there are ways to overcome the struggle and get the results we want. Today, I talk to Dr. BJ Fogg about the science of lasting behavior change and the success he’s seen in those who’ve used his system.     Dr. Fogg is a behavior scientist with deep experience in innovation and teaching. For the past 20 years at Stanford University, he has directed a research lab and he also teaches his models and methods in graduate seminars. His New York Times bestselling book, Tiny Habits: The Small Changes that Change Everything, was published in early 2020 and is contracted to be published in over 25 languages.   This episode is brought to you by Rupa Health and Athletic Greens.   Rupa Health is a place for Functional Medicine practitioners to access more than 2,000 specialty lab tests from over 20 labs like DUTCH, Vibrant America, Genova, Great Plains, and more. Check out a free live demo with a Q&A or create an account here.    Athletic Greens is offering my listeners 10 free travel packs of AG1 when you make your first purchase here.   Here are more of the details from our interview (audio version / Apple Subscriber version):  How BJ’s Mormon upbringing, homosexuality, and perfectionism set the groundwork for his work on behavior change (7:35 / 4:07)      Why feeling successful is the key to building new habits and behavior change (16:06 /  12:19)    The Fogg Behavior Model and the convergence of motivation, ability, and prompt (17:25 / 14:19) Why specificity and simplicity are key to behavior change (22:43 / 19:05) The pervasive myth that eating less and exercise more is the secret to weight loss (24:54 / 21:27)  Why behavior change is not about discipline and willpower (26:27 / 23:36)       Repetition does not create habits, emotion does (32:53 / 29:42)           Three ways to make lasting change (45:02 / 41:49)                     Two overarching maxims for creating behavior change—help people do what they already want to do and help people feel successful (50:52 / 47:29 Untangling vs. breaking habits (56:54 / 52:08) Learn more about BJ’s work at tinyhabits.com and follow him on Facebook @TinyHabits, on Instagram @bjfogg, and on Twitter @bjfogg.   Join the Free 5-Day Program to Build Habits at https://www.tinyhabits.com/join and learn more about the Tiny Habits Certification Program at https://www.tinyhabits.com/certify.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Coming up on this episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy. Again, so it's the feeling of success that is the secret sauce here. So no matter what program or product you look at, if it's designed for lasting change, it will only work if it helps people do what they already want to do, and it helps them feel successful. Those are the overriding principles. Tiny habits is one way of doing that, a very accessible way of doing that.
Starting point is 00:00:25 Hey everyone, it's Dr. Mark. I know a lot of you out there are practitioners like me, helping patients heal using real food and functional medicine as your framework for getting to the root cause. What's critical to understanding what each individual person and body needs is testing, which is why I'm excited to tell you about Rupa Health. Looking at hormones, organic acids, nutrient levels, inflammatory factors, gut bacteria, and so many other internal variables can help us find the most effective path to optimize health and reverse disease. But up till now, that meant you were usually ordering tests for one patient from multiple labs. And I'm sure many of you can relate how time-consuming this process was, and then it could all feel like a lot of work to keep track of.
Starting point is 00:01:09 Now there's Rupa Health, a place for functional medicine practitioners to access more than 2,000 specialty labs from over 20 labs like Dutch, Vibrant America, Genova, Great Plains, and more. Rupa Health helps provide a significantly better patient experience, and it's 90% faster, letting you simplify the entire process of getting the functional medicine lab tests you need and giving you more time to focus on patients. This is really a much-needed option in functional medicine space, and I'm so excited about it. It means better service for you and your patients. You can check it out and look at a free live demo with a Q&A or create an account at rupahealth.com. That's R-U-P-A health dot com.
Starting point is 00:01:49 So many of my patients wait until they're sick to finally take care of their health. I've even had doctors as patients, well, many actually, who just wait for their problems to get worse and worse and receive a diagnosis of disease before taking any kind of action. This is not the path to health. We can live longer, healthier, happier lives if we just prevent imbalances in our bodies in the first place. And nutrition is a key part of this. Many of us don't get the optimal amounts of key nutrients through diet alone, even with a whole foods diet. And then when you add in all the stressors we're up against, like work demands, toxins,
Starting point is 00:02:25 lack of sleep, we're even more likely to have a nutrient deficiency. So one of the things I use every day to optimize my intake of vitamins, minerals, phytonutrients, pre and probiotics is AG1 from Athletic Greens. It's a comprehensive superfood powder with a special blend of high quality whole food ingredients that work together to fill the nutritional gaps in your diet. It's specifically designed to support energy and focus, aid with gut health and digestion, and support a healthy immune system, which we all need right now. I've made AG1 part of my daily ritual because I feel better knowing I have a little extra nutritional insurance to complement my healthy diet. It also gives me a nice energy boost without feeling overstimulated. I like to think of it as a
Starting point is 00:03:11 huge leafy green salad shrunk down into a simple glass of water I could take anywhere. Right now, you can get 10 free travel packs of AG1 when you make your first purchase. Just go to athleticgreens.com forward slash Hyman. That's A-T-H-L-E-T-I-C-G-R-E-E-N-S dot com slash Hyman. Hey, everyone. As 2021 comes to a close, my team and I are excited to re-air some of our best episodes of the year. And thank you for listening to the podcast. It's truly one of my favorite things to do. We wish you all the best for a happy and healthier head and now on to the episode. Welcome to Doctors Pharmacy. I'm Dr. Mark Hyman and that's pharmacy with an F, F-A-R-M-A-C-Y, a place for conversations that matter. And today's conversation should matter to you if you've ever tried to change a habit or create a new behavior, and maybe it didn't go so well. Because we have with us the world's expert on behavior change, Dr. B.J. Fogg from Stanford University. I've been a fanboy
Starting point is 00:04:17 of his for a long time. Many of my friends have trained with him, and I have total FOMO about it because he has really taught me and been a guide for me in my life about some of my own behaviors that I wanted to change that I was pretty stuck with. So BJ is a wonderful, wonderful guy. Aside from being a brilliant scientist at Stanford, he teaches people how behavior works and that way they can actually create things that are good for them, that are good for business, and that are good for everybody in the world. So we all want to change our behaviors to do good things. And how do you do that is a question. And you've probably been asking yourself many times because you've
Starting point is 00:04:53 probably tried and failed many times like me. He's a behavior scientist. He's an innovator. He's directed a research lab at Stanford University since 1998. He doesn't look that old. He's created new models to explain the dynamics of human behavior. God, if we understood behavior, we could change everything, right? These models lay the foundation for a system called behavior design, and that's the focus of his lab at Stanford for the past decade. He's really focusing lately on things that are going on right now, like helping people with coronavirus and challenges they're facing as a result, and also teaching people who are involved in climate change and professionals how to actually get people to change their behaviors. He's personally coached over 40,000 people in
Starting point is 00:05:36 performing new habits. He uses a breakthrough method called Tiny Habits, which is pretty awesome, and he explains this method and broader aspects of behavior design in his New York Times bestselling book, Tiny Habits, The Small Changes That Change Everything. And that's the book. And I've got a dog here with lots of little flippy things that I love this book. So I'm really happy to have you on the podcast, BJ. Welcome, welcome. Thank you, Mark. I am so happy to be talking to you. Okay, so we know that we have some big problems in the world. And, and, you know, I'm a doctor and from my perspective, we have problems with chronic disease in particular, which is impairing so many aspects of our lives. It impairs the
Starting point is 00:06:16 quality of our health. It impairs the quality of our relationships. It impairs our ability to work and be productive and function at a high level. It impairs our ability to work and be productive and function at a high level. It impairs our ability to parent, to pursue our dreams, to be active, to do all the things we might want to do with our lives. And yet it's very difficult for us to change behaviors that are impeding that. And also to look at some of the bigger issues we have around, you know, the social problems we have, the changes in our thinking, in our disparities of our opinions and divisiveness in our society, things like climate change. How do we change our behaviors around that that matter? I mean, we all understand these problems, but so many of us struggle to make those changes in our life. And how do we get the bigger world to
Starting point is 00:07:03 change in terms of businesses and governments and things that really matter. So tell us a little bit about how you got into all this crazy science of behavior change and why what you do is so different. Well, it is very different. So, and the work I'm presenting and Tiny Habits and my research is a whole new way of thinking about behavior and a whole new set of methods for behavior change. It's not the old stuff that is just summarized. It's completely new models and new methods. And how did I get into it? I just have to rewind to my cultural upbringing.
Starting point is 00:07:40 I was raised Mormon in California. And in that tradition, there is a lot about regulating your behavior, modifying your behavior, optimizing who you are. There are restrictions in terms of what you can drink and smoking and so on. And so I think I just grew up in a culture that had a lot of attention related to behavior change and optimizing yourself. I mean, Stephen Covey comes from that tradition. Oh, really? Yeah. So Stephen Covey is like, you know, friend of a friend before he passed away. And, you know, so...
Starting point is 00:08:19 That's the seven habits of highly effective people. Yeah. So there's a lot in the water of Mormonism that has to do with human behavior and becoming a better person. And in fact, in the Mormon doctrine, as I understood it, back when I was practicing Mormon, there is definitely the idea that you are here on this planet to get better and better and eventually get perfect. So the idea that we human beings can eventually become perfect is part of the culture and part of the project of Mormonism. Wow. Maybe we already are perfect and we just have to realize that we are. I think that's probably, but that could be a challenge, right? I wish I were smart enough back then to have said exactly that, Mark, but that's not how they see it, okay? They're here to experience and learn and so on, but I think that really helped me, and then it became...
Starting point is 00:09:20 That's a challenge, right, BJ? Because if your goal is to be perfect, it's almost impossible to achieve, so it could kind of be a struggle, and it could be a setback. Definitely a setback for me. So there was probably a time in my mid-20s, about the time that I was also coming to grips that I'm gay, and that wasn't going to work with Mormonism, and then it wasn't lining up with that. And it just wasn't lining up with the plans I had for myself and my parents had for me and so on. But the idea of almost this obsession with perfectionism really got in my way of making progress. And there's just so many.
Starting point is 00:09:58 I mean, it got to the point, Mark, and I've never shared this before. So, you know, I did what a good Mormon boy would do. You go to Brigham Young University. I wasn't a very good fit there, but the honors program kind of saved me because that was like my home. And did you know you were gay then? Coming to grips with it. Coming to grips. Went into therapy there. But the perfectionism even came down to, as I was walking along campus, it's like, oh, do I take this sidewalk or this sidewalk? There's a right and a wrong answer here. I've got to figure out what it is. And then, I mean, and so that's how it compounded
Starting point is 00:10:33 in my life. And then I was able to set that aside and say, no, I'm good the way I am. And so on one hand, the whole Mormon upbringing, I think, helped me in some ways. On the other hand, the focus on perfectionism, I think it really was something I struggled with and had to get over to be happy. Well, I mean, in a way, your work is the antithesis of perfectionism. It's like the celebration of small little wins that sometimes seem silly, but actually build a life of success, right? Floss one tooth, do one push-up, take one step, you know, say one prayer, whatever it is that you want to do. And I think it's sort of ironic that it sort of embraces the imperfection that we are as human beings. And I think about it in general as lowering the bar. Don't have this high bar that you must clear.
Starting point is 00:11:28 Lower the bar and embrace the fact that you succeeded in getting over the bar. And if you do more than that, terrific. If you do 20 push-ups rather than two, awesome. But you don't raise the bar on yourself. You set yourself up to succeed. So if you're 300 pounds, you know, I'm going to run an Ironman next month. You go, I'm going to walk around the block. Right. Yeah. You know, part of the trick or not trick,
Starting point is 00:11:54 or part of the skill of doing tiny habits effectively is picking the smallest new habit that will also have meaning to you. I mean, it can get so small that it's completely trivial and that's not a good selection. So pick something that's really, really small, but will also have meaning and build from there. One of the misconceptions in the tiny habits method, and I just used a word that implied it, build from there, is that you start small and then you raise the bar, like two push-ups. And I have to do four and six and eight. And yes, you start small, but doing the baseline, the smallest version, the tiniest version is always
Starting point is 00:12:37 okay. So Mark, you told me before we actually started recording that you're kind of doing a lot of push-ups right now. Yeah. So yeah, I'll tell my story. So, you know, I read about your method and, and, and, and I don't want to spill the beans, but you have a method that's called B equals map, which, you know, basically describes that you have to want to do something. You have to have the ability to do something and you have to have a prompt or a trigger that will remind you to do the thing. right? And did I get it right? You got it right. Okay, so I'm like turned 50 and I'm like, I just been running my whole life and biking and doing yoga. And like, I just loathed any kind of strength training
Starting point is 00:13:16 because anytime I tried to lift weights or do a pushup, it would just hurt. And I'd feel sore afterwards and I was really uncomfortable. I was like, this is not for me. And it was just hard to do and I didn't enjoy it. But then I read about your work. I'm like, all right, I'm going to try this. So I'm like, I'm motivated to get stronger because I'm getting older. And I know that's important as a doctor. I definitely have the ability to do it, although I'm not very good at it because I don't do them and it's hard. And I don't like, I like to do things that I'm good at and things that are really a struggle. And then I, so I had the motivation, I had the
Starting point is 00:13:52 ability and then I needed a prompt or a trigger and I decided, well, I take a shower every day. And because I live in a giant barn, it's an old converted barn. It's up on the top floor. I have a long way for the hot water to get upstairs. It takes a while for it to heat up. So while I'm waiting for the water to heat up, I'm going to try to do push-ups when I'm waiting for the shower to heat up. I'll start with one push-up and work my way up. Now I can do 50 push-ups, which is pretty awesome.
Starting point is 00:14:19 I started weight training, and it led to a whole – then I got a trainer. It led to changes in habits that I wanted to do, but it was so hard I never wanted training and it sort of led to a whole, like then I got a trainer. And so it's like, it led to changes in habits that I want to do, but I just, it was so hard. I never wanted to do it. Good for you. And for people who haven't tried pushups a lot, 50 is a lot. There's a huge difference between 20 and 35 and 35 and 50.
Starting point is 00:14:40 So Mark, congrats. Yeah, I'm 60 years old, so it's all right. Not so bad. You know, andats. Yeah, I'm 60 years old, so it's all right. Not so bad. You know, and so in the tiny habits perspective, that would be considered a meanwhile habit, meaning you're waiting for the water. You have this limited period of time where you can turn on the water and you're not doing anything else. So meanwhile, you do push-ups in that. Did you find yourself doing push-ups other times in the day or did it generalize? No, I never did. I never did. I never did. And, and, and then, and then,
Starting point is 00:15:13 but then I started to getting more focused on weight training. So it took, it took a number of years. So maybe it took like six or seven years before I really took the next steps to get a trainer and to start doing more. But, you know, it was interesting. I couldn't have done that, I think, if I hadn't sort of broken that hurdle and made the little changes. You know, and I see that a lot.
Starting point is 00:15:36 So I started teaching tiny habits, started sharing it with people in 2011. But you didn't call it that then, right? You called it this. I called it Three Tiny Habits. Yeah, I called it that from the beginning. I called it that. And the program was called Three Tiny Habits because people were working three times.
Starting point is 00:15:56 And, you know, because I'm a measurements guy, I like studying things. I like numbers. I like research and stuff. I would evaluate it week after week after week. And one of the things, one of the measures that I brought in, and I think I did it the first year, was to look at the ripple effects of doing a two push-ups or flossing one tooth.
Starting point is 00:16:18 Did it lead to other changes? The vast majority of people answered yes. And did it lead to breakthroughs, doing something bigger? And on average, week by week, we would see 18% of the people reporting that they stepped up and did something bigger. Now that's within five days. So there's, yep. And then I started calling it, and this is not part, it's not in the book. I started calling it a springboard moment where people are going along. And I guess I was thinking of gymnasts vaulting,
Starting point is 00:16:47 like they run and they're taking these tiny little steps and they go, and they do something big. And that's going to happen pretty reliably. And it seems to be a function of feeling successful on the tiny things. And then you open up to doing something much bigger that you wouldn't have done before. So let's dig into it a little bit. So this is a very scientifically based model. It's not just some cockamamie idea you came up with, you know, while you were taking a shower. Or maybe you came up with it then, I don't know. But it's something you've studied extensively at Stanford.
Starting point is 00:17:20 It's backed by enormous amounts of research. And you really have created this whole fog behavior model. And talk about these three things that come together at the same moment and why they're important and sort of what you've learned, how it's so different than everything else that we see about behavior change. Yeah. And so tiny habits emerged for me looking at my own behavior model. There's a graphical version with an X and Y axis. The behavior model came together for me in 2007, and it goes like this. And this is a little bit of repeat what you said, Mark. A behavior, any behavior happens when there's motivation through the behavior, there's ability to the behavior, and then there's a prompt.
Starting point is 00:18:08 And when those things converge and behavior happens, if any one of those things is missing, it does not happen. And then when you graph it out in two dimensions, which I could draw or show a poster, if I should, there's a relationship between motivation and ability. If something is hard to do, and in order to do it, in my model, because there's a line that defines what action happens and doesn't, if something's hard to do, then you have to have high levels of motivation. When motivation drops, you can no longer do hard things.
Starting point is 00:18:46 The graphical version of my model says that put on the other end of the model that something's really easy to do. And this is what led to the tiny habits breakthrough for me. Something's really easy to do. Your motivation can be high or middle or even low. It's really, really like a glass of water. When I saw that in my own model I was like oh this what this means is if I make a new habit really really easy to do I don't have to worry about my motivation level very much I need to worry about his pump and that's what and as I started hacking my own behavior this is about 2010 then was like oh my gosh it is so easy to create habits. I can't believe this is easy.
Starting point is 00:19:28 I got to share this. I got to see how other people find this works too. So, BJ, what were those habits that you were able to figure out how to change that got you to figure this out for yourself? What were those things? Flossing. Flossing was one of them. Because there was a moment when I was doing the flossing habit where I
Starting point is 00:19:47 figured out how important emotion was. Ways of snacking. Because I had gained some weight. I didn't think of myself as heavy, but I gained more weight than I wanted. It was habits around productivity. It was, I don't know if it was in the first year, but then I started doing two push-ups after I keyed. So then it was, I will do two push-ups. Usually I do more, but the baseline was two. So they had to do with work, relationships, health. And then once you can create habits readily, it's like no big deal.
Starting point is 00:20:27 It's like, oh, I'm in the habit of playing my flute every morning. And why aren't I having it? Now, there are some habits that are hard to form, and I think we'll get there. But for the most part, if you focus on new habits that you want, there's a way to design them into your life. And that's what Tiny Habits is all about. That's what the book's all about. And so the book is doing two things at once. Number one, it's presenting an absolutely new way of thinking about how behavior works,
Starting point is 00:20:55 a new model and a new set of models, which I think is really groundbreaking. I mean, I think it's, behavior model is a big deal. And then it's also telling people how to apply this in a really easy way in their everyday lives. So in writing the book, I was trying to do both at once. And I hope it's easy. You did. It's very good.
Starting point is 00:21:20 But, you know, you talk about what's different about it. And other behavior change models have been studied. And it's one of the banes of existence. You know, if you go to your doctor and he gives you a prescription, there's only a 50% chance that you'll fill it. And if you fill it, there's probably a 50% chance that you'll take it. And so doctors do all these great things. Unless you're a surgeon, you have the patient lying unconscious on the table, you can do whatever you want to them. You know, to get patients to do what you think is right for their health or what you think will help them, whether it's take a pill. I mean, taking a pill is pretty easy, right? Forget eating better, exercising, meditating, getting eight hours of sleep, building your
Starting point is 00:22:03 social network, relationships, you know, all those things are so challenging. And it is why we three, I think, or after class two, he emailed me and said, BJ, I now see for the last 20 years I've been doing this exactly wrong. And I felt kind of bad. But also he is creating a behavior change program for his patients and other physicians. And now he can do it right. One of the systematic problems is focusing people or yourself on something abstract like, oh I gotta exercise. That's an abstract thing. It's not a behavior. We'll often call those things behaviors but they're abstractions. And then the next thing that goes wrong is people say, I just need to motivate myself. That combination of trying to motivate yourself towards something abstract does not work very well at all.
Starting point is 00:23:14 Whether you're changing your own behavior or somebody else's. In fact, this is kind of an oversimplification, but in my work in Tiny Habits, rather than motivating the attraction, you make something very specific, really easy. And so that's like do three jumping jacks, right? Yeah. And make it really easy to do. And so you're not worried about motivation and you know exactly what the behavior is. One of the differences between, and I think this doctor, this would be one of the issues, an expert when you say, you know, eat more leafy greens. An expert in his or her mind knows what that means, but an amateur might go, I don't know what that means. Grass, eat grass. So experts that are prescribing like, hey, you need to change your diet, eat more leaky grains. They're not understanding that perhaps their patients are totally confused. So instead, they need to be very, very specific.
Starting point is 00:24:11 Here's what I want you to do. Eat bok choy and broccoli and spinach. 17 leaves of kale. Yes, every evening and steam it or saute it. And cook it this way. So really it's what is exactly the behavior and here's how to do it. And that is a much more successful approach. Geez, well, no wonder we have such a problem because all doctors say is eat less and exercise more and lose weight.
Starting point is 00:24:43 Good luck with that. You know, I don't know if you want to go that i'm going to go here and you can change it if you want but just everyday people don't even have the right guidance i mean for most people if i were to walk out on the street say oh how do you lose do you lose weight? I would wager 90% plus would say, Oh, I just have to exercise more. And that's the, you know, that's what people, which is actually a false idea. Right. Right. And so, so people, so they're like, Oh, if I only could get myself to exercise more, I could lose weight. Well, they're headed in the wrong direction.
Starting point is 00:25:19 They haven't been given the right behavior, which is mostly nutrition behaviors as you know, and the right way to which is mostly nutrition behaviors, as you know, and the right way to make those into habits. So there is, and why that idea that exercise is a key to weight loss, why that keeps living on and on. I have no idea. Oh, I'll tell you why. Why is that so persistent? Well, because it's, you know, the mantra of the government and the food industry is calories in, calories out is the secret to weight loss. And it has nothing to do with nutritional quality.
Starting point is 00:25:51 And so it doesn't matter whether you have a soda or broccoli, as long as they're the same calories, it's the same amount of energy. And if you can exert more exercise to expend that energy, as long as you're in calorie balance, you'll stay the same weight. If you're exercising more than the calories you're taking in, you'll lose weight. But scientifically, that's just not true because all calories are not the same. And some calories like sugar and starch actually cause you to spike insulin, which makes you store fat. So I've written about 16 books on this. But it's really extraordinary. And one of the things I read in your book that I really liked, and I use all the
Starting point is 00:26:31 time, which is, you know, people internalize this message of it's your fault. It's your fault you don't exercise. It's your fault that you're overweight. Shame on you. But you said, I'm here to say it isn't your fault and changing your behavior isn't as hard as you think. And I think that's really an essential message because people are stuck in this idea of self-loathing, self-hate and discouragement because they're not having the willpower, the motivation, and they beat themselves up about it. How do you address that with people? You know, I didn't understand that's where everyday people are until about coaching was probably two or 3000 people. This would be 2011. So you're a slow learner.
Starting point is 00:27:13 I was in my little bubble of Stanford and high achievers and CrossFit type people, right? So I'm in this very selective, selective kind of world. And I'm coaching 300 people a week about in tiny habits through email, but there's email exchanges and about two, 3000 people and somebody wrote me and she said, Oh my gosh, BJ, thanks to you. I now see that I've endured a lifetime of self trash talk and in tiny habits. What we do is we teach people to say good for me and feel successful and embrace it. And so she wrote to thank me. She says, this, this, boom, has changed
Starting point is 00:27:51 my life. And I paused. There was, this was a huge moment for me, Mark. It's like, that is where people are really at. And then I started reading all the emails and my interactions with it were different. And I was like, oh, people, they have so many ways to say, I did a bad job. I'm insufficient. I lack willpower, which is, and that's why in the book, when I say that, that was in some ways a little bit risky because it's just inviting a lot of criticism, but it's true and it's accurate. And so to say, look, if you haven't changed, it's not your fault. You just didn't have the right way to do it yet. Now you do. Welcome to tiny habits. Now you do and now you can do it. And it's not about willpower or discipline. It's
Starting point is 00:28:40 about design. You design new habits into your life. You don't force them. You don't use discipline, motivation, or willpower. It's a design challenge, not a test of somebody's character. I think that's so important to say that because I see this all the time as a doctor. People beat themselves up. They trash talk. They have self-loathing, they get discouraged. And I just love this part of your book, 100 Ways to Celebrate and Feel Shine. And you have like 100 ways to celebrate yourself and to celebrate the little successes and the tiny habits and builds and builds on a positive feedback loop. And I think that's a really key part of behavior change is these positive feedback loops. So it's like, oh, by the time I could do 10 pushups and I wasn't in pain for a week in my chest muscles, I was like, oh, this is fun.
Starting point is 00:29:33 And then I want to do more. And it's like, and I felt good and I want to do more. tiny strategy you have throughout the book that really help people to break free from some of these really discouraging and debilitating beliefs about themselves that limit themselves in their lives, that limit themselves from actually doing the things they want to do. And it's so important. And you talk about this idea of behavior design. So it's not just random. You're actually thinking about this, this sort of, you know, if you want to do certain things, like if you want to, I don't know, build a house, you have to put the foundation in,
Starting point is 00:30:12 you have to put the framing in, you have to put the, like there's a design feature of how to get things to work. And we've been going about it all wrong when it comes to behavior change, which is why we're not changing our behaviors at a scale that we need to, because many of the problems we're facing in our society are behavior change, which is why we're not changing our behaviors at a scale that we need to, because many of the problems we're facing in our society are behavior change problems. And you're pointing this out so well. So what are the other strategies that aren't working that people do? Because I think it's helpful for people to understand, you know, you've talked
Starting point is 00:30:40 about this model, it seems pretty obvious. You have a motivation to do something, you have the ability to do it, and you have a trigger or a prompt. And that seems like a very simple model, and it is. It works. I've used it. But on the other hand, you know, what is pushing against people that is limiting them? Well, we talked about the idea of people even focusing on the wrong thing. Like if your aspiration is weight loss and you think it's about, you know,
Starting point is 00:31:04 walking on the treadmill at the gym, focus on the wrong thing. Like if your aspiration is weight loss and you think it's about walking on the treadmill at the gym, focus on the wrong behavior. So that's one of the systematic problems. Another one of the problems is the idea that you set this really lofty goal and then you just have to keep yourself motivated toward that lofty goal. Now in my work I don't use the word goal. In fact in the book I talk about why I think it's a bad idea to use that word. Are you going to put a whole bunch of goal-setting people out of business? I know. Make their lives out of helping people set goals.
Starting point is 00:31:36 Not totally opposed to the goal thing, but it's not a winning strategy. The fact that I've even written down a goal and I'm like, now I'm going to just keep myself motivated toward this goal. If it's hard to do, you're not facing the reality that your motivation is going to shift over time. The idea, and we can come back to that if you want.
Starting point is 00:31:55 And so the goal setting people don't get super upset with me. I break it into aspirations and outcomes. So there's a type of goal. That's an aspiration. There's a type of goal that's an aspiration. There's a type of goal that's an outcome. So rather than using an ambiguous word, because I'm really big on precision, let's use, when it's an aspiration, like earlier, Mark, you said you wanted to get stronger. That's an aspiration. And then you find behaviors, specific behaviors that will take you there. An outcome might be, somebody might say, wow, I want to lose 20 pounds.
Starting point is 00:32:25 That's an outcome. Then you find specific behaviors that will take you there. So in either case, you start with what you want to achieve. And this is part of the system in the book. And then you figure out what behaviors are the right ones for you to take you there. So you don't guess at the behaviors. There's a way to figure out
Starting point is 00:32:43 what are the best behaviors for you. You either did that aspiration or the outcome. And you, I'll go to a slightly different spot. Another one of the misleading ideas is that repetition creates the habit. So if you can just keep yourself doing the behavior, it'll become a habit. And that's not true at all when you look at what the research, so the people that are advocating this, and there are very popular books, and there's a lot of the culture that's saying repetition creates habits, and that's not true. You're being misled by those books and that thing. When you look at the research that most people cite, it shows that repetition correlates the strength of habit. It gives no evidence whatsoever that
Starting point is 00:33:26 repetition causes the habit to form. So the correction in my book, what I try to make very clear is it's emotions that create the habits. So that's one of the myths, myth busters in the book. Other things include like you have to set a goal. Why doesn't repetition cause habit change? Well, I have quite a long, so I'm training the tiny habits coaches. We go through this thoroughly. And the reason, I mean, the question really is, why do people think it creates habit change, right? That's really the question. Why do people think that?
Starting point is 00:34:10 Well, because they've been told that for years. So when you look at the research, it does not say that. So I'll give you an example. Like for me, just to be a little devil's advocate, I had back surgery recently, and I really don't like swimming long distances. I've never really done it. I love swimming, but I just like go out for a little bit. But I had to like swim and I really don't like swimming long distances. I've never really done it. I love swimming, but I just like to go out for a little bit.
Starting point is 00:34:27 But I had to like swim for half an hour. And at first I was like, oh, it's so far and I have to swim back because I swim in the lake. And it's like I was resistant to it, but I knew I had to do it because I couldn't do anything else. But over time, the more I did it, now I look forward to it and now I can do it and I don't have that mental resistance that I have. Yeah. And the way to think about that, it wasn't a function of repetition. It was a function of your feeling successful. You're seeing progress, right? Okay. So notice it resulted, like if you had to do the
Starting point is 00:35:02 swimming and you never felt successful You would not have eventually once you hailed you would not have created a habit out of that. Okay. All right, though So people are first they're misleading you and these books and blogs But when people think that repetition is the key to creating habits They think oh, I've got a and one one of the memes is it's 66 days. Not true, but that's what's out there. So they think, okay, in order to create an exercise habit, I have to repeat it 66 days. Oh, I don't have time for that. I'm going to wait till I have time. They look at behavior changes, something to dread, something to endure, something that might be painful. And none of those things is helpful. Instead, you can change your behavior
Starting point is 00:35:46 by feeling like happy and joyous. Now, when you look at what has worked, like your example's a great one, Mark. When it has worked, what will always be true is that there was an emotional component where you felt more successful or it relieved some negative emotion. Yeah. Or pain or right. That's great. That's what it is.
Starting point is 00:36:11 And so in tiny habits, we don't leave that to chance. I mean, I have a chapter that's like emotions, great habits. And then we give in the book specific techniques and the coaches that coach people in tiny habits, help people find exactly what techniques do you use so you can feel that emotion at exactly the right time. You can wire in habits really, really quickly. And the better you are at feeling that emotion, that positive emotion on demand, the better you will be at wiring and habits. So that's an interesting piece. So it's the B,
Starting point is 00:36:51 which is behavior equals motivation, ability, and prompt, but there's also the emotion in there. Yeah. Yeah. Well, let me sketch it out. So when I say behavior, I mean all types of behavior. Habit is a subset. So within like if I were drawing a diagram within the big circle that is behavior motivation ability prompt applies to all behavior types it applies to habits it applies to stopping behaviors it applies to one-time behaviors it applies to temporary behaviors like uh like taking an antibiotic then when you get down to the subset of habits, those are behaviors you do quite automatically. Those are different than the other types of behaviors.
Starting point is 00:37:29 What creates the automaticity is the emotion. So the positive feedback, the emotion. I have people focus on the emotion of success, the feeling of success. That's what makes that behavior automatic and puts it in the category of what we call habit. Powerful. And you talk about how this starts to change people's identity, the way they think about themselves and see themselves. Tell us more how that happens. I can't say this is the magic because I'm a scientist, but this is awesome. What happens, and we see this in our data week after week,
Starting point is 00:38:10 is when people do something small and feel successful about it, like they're flossing one tooth or doing two push-ups or steaming broccoli for dinner, that feeling of success also changes how they think about themselves. Oh, I'm the kind of person who can take care of my teeth. I'm the kind of person that eats steamed vegetables. So they don't change their identity by going and listening to motivational talk, at least in tiny habits.
Starting point is 00:38:42 They change because they see evidence that they are changing and they're seeing the effects of that. And that identity shift can happen really quickly. We see a lot of evidence in five days and it seems to be a function of people seeing evidence and feeling successful in their quest to change. And it doesn't have to be like running a marathon. So it's like a feedback loop. It's a positive feedback loop. Yeah. And when people acknowledge that and see that, and part of the program and part of the book is like, Hey, look,
Starting point is 00:39:22 recognize you are succeeding. I might be tiny, but you're still changing. That then shifts people away from self trash talk the thinking that they don't have enough willpower to seeing themselves in a whole new light and the phrase that come back to us like I now say I'm the kind of person contained I can follow through I can achieve whatever goal I have. And it goes on and on. So it's the positive feedback loop. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:39:49 And I don't talk about it exactly in those words as positive feedback, but that's exactly what it is. I mean, we talk about it as emotions. But it is this positive feedback that affirms you're succeeding. So it's the feeling of success that wires in the habit and also motivates you're succeeding. So it's the feeling of success that wires in the habit and also motivates you to continue. So it has those two functions. Right? Well, this is powerful. And I think it sort of breaks us free from one feeling bad about ourselves
Starting point is 00:40:18 because we don't change because we had the wrong map literally. And now we've got a different map that we should try out and see if we can try to adjust our behaviors according to this model. And I think, you know, you have the two ends of the spectrum where your motivation can be high and your ability might not be high, but that motivation can overcome the ability that's not so high. And you can also have an ability that you have for sure that's super easy and not that much motivation, but that's also easy to do. So there's a whole way to engage with this. It's kind of across the spectrum of behavior change. But as I sort of studied behavior change, because for me as a doctor treating chronic disease, most of it's driven
Starting point is 00:40:59 by behavior, right? Eating the wrong foods, not eating the right foods, not exercising, sleeping, meditating, you know, the social connections, all those things are so driven by behavior. It's not, you know, 80% of health issues are not something that can be addressed at the doctor's office. They have to be addressed, you know, where you live, eat, work, play, pray, you know, that's where health happens, right? So, you know, I really, for so many years, focused on the, you know, sort of the minutiae of biochemistry and physiology and genetics and the microbiome and all the metabolism, all this cool stuff about how the body worked as an ecosystem and systems biology. And it was just so fascinating to me. And I knew how to help people. And I could if they did what I told them to do. But the problem was getting them to do what I told them to do.
Starting point is 00:41:49 And they were, you know, those O or there's just highly motivated patients who literally would follow directions and they would get better. But the majority were just struggling. And then I went to Haiti after the earthquake, and I wanted to volunteer like many people did. And I had the opportunity to go. And I met a guy named Paul Farmer who discovered that he was trying to address some really big challenges in the world around TB and AIDS in countries where they were really just ignored. I mean, the poor countries like Haiti and Africa and people just were giving up on these populations because there were so many changes that had to happen for them to actually take their medications and do the right thing. It wasn't like they didn't know what to do. And he realized that he used something called accompaniment as a tool for
Starting point is 00:42:29 change. He created this whole model called accompaniment. It was this French word in Haiti, but essentially it was peer support. It was people helping each other and helping each other, supporting each other, helping each other be accountable to one another. And when I came back from Haiti, I met Rick Warren, who was a pastor at Saddleback Church, a faith-based minister. And I'm a Jewish guy from New York, so I don't know what I know about that. But we got to talking after he came to see me for a visit, and he told me how unhealthy his church was. I said, why don't we start a healthy living program in your church and put it through these small groups that he had? He had 5,000 small groups. And I was like, wow, this isn't a mega church. This is thousands of mini
Starting point is 00:43:08 churches. So let's put in this curriculum and see what happens. And I thought, you know, a couple of hundred people would show up. There were 15,000 people that signed up the first week. And they had more people there than any other event they'd ever had, whether it was the 9-11 services, the Obama-McCain debate. And these 15,000 people worked together in small groups supporting each other, and they lost a quarter million pounds in a year and got rid of all sorts of chronic illnesses. And all they did was help each other, hold each other accountable, support each other, encourage each other. And I think that's a big key piece. This is Christakis' work about obesity being contagious, but it's also true that health is contagious.
Starting point is 00:43:45 That behavior change is contagious. And if all your friends are going to yoga and drinking green juices, you'd probably be healthier than if all your friends are, you know, drinking beer and, you know, eating Cheetos and McDonald's. Right. So I think we have to really get clear about, about the, the other component of behavior change, which I think is this, this social networks that we live in and around and with,
Starting point is 00:44:07 because it's such a powerful force. So I'm curious about how you address that. And we've done this at Cleveland Clinic. And what's interesting, BJ, we've started to do the research on this. We'll be publishing it soon. But we found that we've compared our one-on-one visits with the same doctors for the same kind of conditions
Starting point is 00:44:24 compared to group visits with the same doctors and staff. And we find that the people in the groups get better and get better faster and get even better than one-on-one visits, which is bizarre. Yeah. Let me map it out. What's going on there. And what everyone listening to this should understand that it's behavior change there's a system behind it it's system it's not like random stuff but it's not been outlined until tiny habits i mean that's why i'm sharing the system like here's how this tiny habits but starting in 2011 when i started teaching this, I said, look, people, there are three ways to make lasting change.
Starting point is 00:45:09 One is have an epiphany. Guess what? You can't design for that. They happen, but you're not going to make one happen. Your doctor's probably not going to make it happen. So take epiphany off the table. Number two, you can redesign your environment. And this is where the social piece.
Starting point is 00:45:27 Number three is you change in these tiny ways. So this program is about the third one. But yes, changing your environment works together with the tiny habits method. So what you're leveraging, there's a few things that social brings to the table. As you have a new social environment around you, then it makes the good behaviors easier to do. You become aware of what other behaviors you can do. So it's not just motivation that the social group provides. Yes, they provide motivation. Yes. But they also, let's say you're hanging out with people who are trying to eat healthy. It's like, oh my gosh, you're eating a kimchi. Why are you eating kimchi? Oh my gosh, I'm going to start eating kimchi, right? So it connects you with new behaviors. Yes, it hits the motivation. So I'm going through the behavior model. It can make behaviors easier to do because they can teach you how to do
Starting point is 00:46:25 it or they can guide you to do it or they maybe like deliver kimchi to your doorstep and then finally prompt, social can prompt you, they can serve as a reminder. So if people can change their social environment, that's a super, in fact, it's so important that a whole year of my Stanford lab, this is what we focused on. We called it Change Together. And we looked at the different patterns of how social, there's not just one pattern, there's a variety of patterns. There's not 50, there's like 20 of how social works
Starting point is 00:47:02 in successful programs to create this ongoing change. And so, but it functions in that way. I mean, so quick summary, the big picture is there's two reliable ways to change. Change your environment, change in these tiny ways. When you redesign your environment, you connect with new behaviors. Yes, you can increase your motivation and it make easier to do and they're a prompt so it's hitting on all of those things and with tiny habits often what you do is you adjust your environment to make
Starting point is 00:47:35 so that's really this loop of tiny changes shift your environment leads to more and so on so there's this loop this isn't in the book there's other work where I've shared this. Those are the only two ways to change. And social is such a role. If you can immerse yourself in the right social group and the household is one that I've long, long, long championed. Change together as a household. But even that is really hard for some people to do. Yeah, I think that's really true.
Starting point is 00:48:03 So what you're saying is this is really complimentary, tiny habits and changing your environment, which is really your social network, even, you know, in your house. I mean, I literally changed my house as when COVID happened, I had to change so many things in my house because I wanted to incite the right habits. So I got exercise equipment. I, you know, I did all the things that I had. I created a special room where I put all this stuff that I want to use because I really didn't have that before.
Starting point is 00:48:30 And so I made it easier for myself, and I created those little triggers. So it's helpful. There's something else I want to sort of talk about, which I'd like to understand from the behavior change point of view, which is kind of the opposite of what you're proposing that I often use as a doctor. Because if someone's 300 pounds and I tell them have one less Coke and they're having 12 Cokes a day, they're not going to really see a change. Maybe they will. I don't know. But they're probably not. But on the other hand, I've heard examples of where these things really work. For example, Walmart has these tiny change habits things. I don't know if you were involved with
Starting point is 00:49:09 that or not, but it kind of reminded me of your work where they're like, make really small little changes. So there's this one woman who didn't want to, he was a very overweight woman, didn't want to give up her Doritos or whatever she was eating, or Cheetos. So she decided she would eat one less a day from the package. So the first time she would eat all of them except for one. And then she did all of them except for two. And then by the end of the month, she was not eating any. Now that certainly can work. But what I've found is when people are struggling with really significant issues, if I can get them to experience a massive shift in how they feel quickly, that it drives their motivation that then helps them continue. So for example, I'll put people on relatively, for them, it's
Starting point is 00:49:54 mostly how I eat, but it's a relatively extreme diet of getting rid of all processed food, getting rid of junk food, getting rid of sugar, getting rid of starch, eating whole foods, you know, doing that for 10 days, eliminating common food sensitivities like gluten and dairy. And I see people have remarkable changes, not just a weight loss, but energy, sleep, you know, digestive issues, cognitive function, sinus issues. I mean, everything gets better, skin. And then they go, oh, and then they're much more motivated to continue. Now, sometimes they fall off over time,
Starting point is 00:50:25 but I find those massive changes quickly can often, you know, jolt people into longer-term results. I'm just wondering how you frame that. Let me explain what's going on. So in behavior design, Mark, you talked about this earlier. It's a set of models, including the Fog Behavior Model. There's other models. It's a set of models putting the fog behavior model there's other models it's a set of methods and there are two maxims and these maxims are if people listening or watching this forget everything remember
Starting point is 00:50:56 these two things this maps to your example and everything that works maximum number one help people do what they already want to do. So if you want to help somebody create lasting change, you've got to help them do what they already want to do. To get them to do things they don't want to do, that's failure. Maximum number two. I can't get my wife to learn how to water ski. Maybe. Maximum number two is help people feel successful so it sounds like mark in the cases where people did this more intensive program yes they started seeing success again so it's the feeling of success that is the secret sauce here so no matter what program or product you look at if it's designed for lasting change it will only work if it helps people do what they
Starting point is 00:51:45 already want to do and it helps them feel successful. Those are the overriding principles. Tiny habits is one way of doing that, a very accessible way of doing that. There's other ways of doing it too. And it sounds like this 10-day intensive is a way of doing it because you're helping them do what they already want to do and you're helping them feel successful. Well, that makes sense. So it doesn't really change so you also this thing in your book you talked about with this this um this idea of of a a skills of change what are the skills of change because that sounds like a good thing to know about yeah so the ability to create habits and to change is a skill like driving, like surfing, like speaking French. And it's never been broken down that way before.
Starting point is 00:52:32 So I do that in part of the book. And there are five categories. And within each category, there are specific skills. We've actually covered some of them today. One of them is knowing which habits will have meaning for you. Another one is knowing how to feel successful, even with tiny things and so on. And some people are better than others, naturally. It feels just like anything else, right? With surfing, some people are going to be better at balance or whatever. But with practice, you can get better
Starting point is 00:53:02 and better. And so in the five-day tiny habits program people learn a lot of these skills we don't call it out in the program because we try to keep the program really tidy and short and compact but we're teaching people about the skill of designing about designing their habits if needed the skill celebration, which is the way you cause yourself to feel successful. And there, so in the book, I talk about 24 different skills of change. I don't list them all. I mean, there's a chapter when I talk about how tiny grows to be transformative. That's why I say what you're learning is these skills of change. And once you have these skills, and one is embracing a new
Starting point is 00:53:45 identity so hit on some of these then you can apply it broadly and it has this transformative effect um and so yeah seeing it as a skill and not magic or not just one little tweak there's no magical trick to changing your behavior just like there's no magical trick to changing your behavior. Just like there's no magical trick to driving or surfing or speaking French. You can get better at it. You can approach it systematically, but you do need, it's helpful to have a good coach or a good guide. So you're essentially talking about BJ is you sort of divine the science, if you can divine a science of behavior change. And it pointed out that the ways that we've been trying to change the behaviors, whether dropping bad ones or taking on good ones, has really been misguided and has led us to fail and feel guilty and feel shame and
Starting point is 00:54:38 feel like it's our fault. And that there really is a different way of thinking about it. I mean, it is a very specific skill that's scientifically derived that you can apply every day in your life that works. And that it's not just some airy-fairy thing from positive psychology. But there you are, a Stanford professor. You've got the full weight of that behind you and all the science behind you and and you've been able to show this not just as a theoretical idea but you've been able to actually apply this across individuals businesses and and far more so can you talk about what you've seen in your work as examples of people and organizations and businesses that have actually transformed as a result of this work wow where, where shall we start? Individuals and then work up, I guess? Yeah, yeah. Give me the full spectrum because I think it would be helpful for
Starting point is 00:55:30 people to understand, you know, how this applies because I think we get the basic framework, but then, you know, it almost seems too good to be true, but I think in real life, you've played this out and it actually comes to fruition. I get emails every day people thinking me about oh my gosh BJ I've tried everything and finally they found the online five-day program that's free or the tiny habits book and they just you know if people don't follow directions it doesn't work because sometimes you say I'm gonna do tiny habits and I'm gonna do 20 push-ups and it's like guess what that's not tiny enough okay but when they you know follow the
Starting point is 00:56:05 system they see that they can create these habits and yeah they're doing push-ups and they're flossing they're taking vitamins or what have you but the bigger impact is this identity shift and the five-day program is really designed uh i designed it and iterated to really build people's confidence, they can change. And that's one of the things we measure is how much did the confidence increase that they can change, which is this, is more important than if somebody's flossing or if somebody's, you know, lifting a dumbbell twice, is confidence they can change. And so in the book, I tell, they're all true stories in the book. So as a scientist, everything in the book, including the longer stories, had to be absolutely true. So there's a story in there of a woman named Junie who had a sugar addiction
Starting point is 00:56:57 and then applied the tiny habits method to untangle that sugar addiction to the point where she got free from sugar and then discovered all these aspects of her life that were better richer and better how did she do that how did she do that what well what she did i'm sure everybody listening this podcast wants to know, including me. Okay. So the right way to think about a habit that you want to get rid of is not breaking it. It's untangling it. Breaking, like a lot of things in the world of behavior change, we're using the wrong words and we're setting the wrong expectations. Breaking is the wrong expectation. You don't suddenly break a habit like that. So she looked at what her sugar, her specific habits around sugar, like, oh, I need a snack here. I need ice cream here, whatever. And then she found what was
Starting point is 00:57:55 prompting and motivating those, and she untangled it piece by piece. And so think of it as a big tangle, and you take the easiest tangle first and get rid of that, and you work your way toward the middle until it all comes free and clear. So that's the overall way to think about it. How an individual might do it, I think, is very individual, which is why it's a system and you use the system. And so the way June did it might be different than other people struggling with sugar. But certainly look at the sugar addiction, not as a single habit, but as a tangle of habits. Understand what's driving those and then take the easiest one first and tackle that. Like if you have a pint of ice cream in your freezer, you probably don't want to have it there.
Starting point is 00:58:43 Yeah. I mean, I... How did I get freezer, probably don't want to have it there. Yeah. I mean, I, um, How did I get there? I don't know. I just kind of walked in and jumped in the fridge. That's, that's kind of like a redesign. Oh, you know, the book is not that prescriptive about what exact habits to form. People should be looking at you, Mark, for that, which I love that, you know, you're like, here's what, here are the exact habits.
Starting point is 00:59:05 My book is about how to create any habit. Any habit. Any habit you want and look to Mark and others for what nutrition habits. But the one place that I kind of shift in the book is I talk about the fridge and redesigning the fridge, and I call it Super Fridge. And I get quite prescriptive. I like that I say hey make the fridge the center of your health quest and look at it as a friend to help you eat healthy things and here's how you do
Starting point is 00:59:34 it and we've done it it's called super rich and our super fridge guess what no ice cream allowed no pie allowed but all and the idea is basically this you open the fridge and everything in there you can eat at any moment there's no restrictions even in the middle of the night you could eat anything in there and it's all ready to go or it's chopped up and ready to be prepared so that's super fresh so you invest in your environment once a week restock it so then eating on your game plan is tiny and simple throughout the rest of the yeah so that um what about an organizational level or a bigger bigger change you've seen happen as a result of the work yeah um i can't mention the company but a very large health care system wanted their employees to be healthier so So I created a product for them,
Starting point is 01:00:26 which is essentially focus mapping, like I talk about in the book, that they could do as groups. So their unit based team would go in, have a like 45 minute work session together and walk out of that meeting, understanding what are the specific behaviors that we as a team are going to implement.
Starting point is 01:00:46 So they were able to bring a behavior change system to their employees that, one, helped the employees do what they already wanted to do. And mostly that, helping people feel successful wasn't actually so much part of that product. From a methods perspective, this is more like boot camp but you come to work there are ways there are methods for behavior change people designing a very large financial institution that everyone knows the name of and they're a good one they're not one of the bad guys one of the good guys they use the methods of
Starting point is 01:01:25 behavior design to figure out what should this online tool do or what should our app do so they're using behavior design to really understand their customers and design successful change solutions for their customers so it goes all the way from sugar addiction to group change to designing products for change. Maybe that's why Amazon two weeks ago, picked tiny habits is number one book of the year so far in business and leadership. Wow. Mark,
Starting point is 01:01:56 I went, well, I'm happy, but no, I took all the business stuff out, but I guess I really didn't because you can use the methods in a business context and so great congratulations yeah yeah so anytime you're looking at behavior and how to design for change your design is relevant and the best source of that right now is the book tiny
Starting point is 01:02:20 habits because it does walk you through what those methods are and you can apply it whether it's a sales organization whether it's a startup or whether it's a massive organization that simply wants to change the culture and have more communication internally and that's a behavior change challenge amazing so if people get the book and i want everybody to get it's called tiny habits the small changes that change everything which sounds like it's true and i think it is and I want everybody to get. It's called Tiny Habits to Small Changes that Change Everything, which it sounds like it's true. And I think it is because it certainly helped me. And I think I understand the way we have to sort of break free of some of the old ideas about behavior change.
Starting point is 01:02:54 And this is really a roadmap for that. If people could only apply one thing, what would you want them to do? Probably remember the two maxims and apply it throughout your life, whether it's with your spouse or your kids or your employees or yourself. Help people do what they already want to do, help people feel successful. Those are the high-level guides and applying it to yourself. Help yourself do what you already want to do. Help yourself feel successful. I mean,
Starting point is 01:03:21 that would be, that's the message if I had to just bring it down into two sentences. You know, one of the things that's so great about this book, Tiny Habits, The Small Change That Changed Everything, is it's just full of practical, fun things. For example, 300 recipes for tiny habits in 15 different life situations that you can use to really help you improve your life and feel better and do the things you want to do. Because we all have those things we want to do. We just don't know how to get there. And that's what this does. And we can be successful. And it's such a great map. And there's also so many things you're offering, BJ, that are just so great. If people go to tinyhabits.com, they can learn about the book.
Starting point is 01:03:58 They can get a free five-day course. Tell us about that. You've been mentioning that, but tell us about this five-day course people can sign up for. Total time investment during the week is 40 minutes. So it takes about 15 minutes to get started over the weekend, about five minutes a day. And it's the fastest way to learn about habits and figure out what works for you. So that's kind of the appetizer. And then from there, you can go to the book or you can do the course again. And if you really want to start using it, coach others.
Starting point is 01:04:26 We have a certification course in Tiny Habits. That's like for people that want to use it professionally, and that's terrific. And then I have a ton of videos and other things online. But the book really brings together behavior design and tiny habits in a way like never before. And Mark, so thank you for spotlighting it and helping me share it. I so appreciate it. Of course. And the certification program is so great because, you know,
Starting point is 01:04:50 the best way to learn something is to teach it. So that's why I wrote so many books, because I want to learn all this stuff and become an expert. So I have to learn about it. I think if you want to really get solidified in your own life, not just be a professional who can help people, which is what we need more of. I mean, I think, you know, your certification program is such a fantastic idea because, you know, my vision and dream has been for us to create literally millions of coaches, millions of health coaches and community health workers who can help us really transform our healthcare system and our chronic disease epidemic. And then of course, live all the lives dreams we have. So it's not just about
Starting point is 01:05:29 health. It's about all of it. And that's what's so great about your work. And I've been such a fan for so many years. It's great to finally have you on the podcast. I encourage everybody to pick up a copy of Tiny Habits, the small changes that change everything and it works. So thank you so much, BJ. I encourage everybody to check it out, tinyhabits.com. You can learn more about him at bjfogg with two g's dot com as well. And enjoy your success, everybody, because once you start this, there ain't no going back. See, I went from one push-up to 50 push-ups, and I'm going all the way to 100. That's my goal.
Starting point is 01:06:04 I want to do 100 push-ups when I'm 100 years old. How do I get there? But it's not a goal. So thank you all for listening to the Doctors Pharmacy podcast. If you love this podcast, please share with your friends and family on social media. Leave a comment. We'd love to hear from you. Talk about habits that you've changed and how you've done that.
Starting point is 01:06:22 We'd love to know about that. Subscribe wherever you get your podcasts, and we'll you next time on The Doctor's Pharmacy. Hey everybody, it's Dr. Hyman. Thanks for tuning into The Doctor's Pharmacy. I hope you're loving this podcast. It's one of my favorite things to do and introducing you all the experts that I know and I love and that I've learned so much from. And I want to tell you about something else I'm doing, which is called Mark's Picks. It's my weekly newsletter. And in it, I share my favorite stuff from foods to supplements to gadgets to tools to enhance your health. It's all the cool stuff that I use and that my team uses to optimize and enhance our health. And I'd love you to sign up for the weekly newsletter. I'll only send it to you once a week on Fridays.
Starting point is 01:07:07 Nothing else, I promise. And all you do is go to drhyman.com forward slash pics to sign up. That's drhyman.com forward slash pics, P-I-C-K-S, and sign up for the newsletter, and I'll share with you my favorite stuff that I use to enhance my health and get healthier and better and live younger longer. Now back to this week's episode. Hi everyone. I hope you enjoyed this week's episode. Just a reminder that this podcast is for educational purposes only. This podcast is not a
Starting point is 01:07:37 substitute for professional care by a doctor or other qualified medical professional. This podcast is provided on the understanding that it does not constitute medical or other professional advice or services. If you're looking for help in your journey, seek out a qualified medical practitioner. If you're looking for a functional medicine practitioner, you can visit ifm.org and search their find a practitioner database. It's important that you have someone in your corner who's trained, who's a licensed healthcare practitioner, and can help you make changes, especially when it comes to your health.

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