The Peter Attia Drive - #183 - James Clear: Building & changing habits
Episode Date: November 8, 2021James Clear is the author of the New York Times bestseller Atomic Habits. His extensive research into human behavior has helped him identify key components of habit formation and develop the “Four... Laws of Behavioral Change.” In this episode, James provides insights into how both good and bad habits are formed, including the influence of genetics, environment, social circles, and more. He points to changes one can make to cultivate more perseverance and discipline and describes the profound impact habits can have when tying them into one’s self-identity. Finally, James breaks down his “Four Laws of Behavioral Change” and how to use them to create new habits, undo bad habits, and make meaningful changes in one’s life. We discuss: Why James became deeply interested in habits [1:45]; Viewing habits through an evolutionary lens [6:00]; The power of immediate feedback for behavior change, and why we tend to repeat bad habits [9:15]; The role of genetics and innate predispositions in determining one’s work ethic and success in a given discipline [14:30]; How finding one’s passion can cultivate perseverance and discipline [23:15]; Advantages of creating systems and not just setting goals [29:15]; The power of habits combined with self-identity to induce change [36:30]; How a big environmental change or life event can bring on radical behavioral change [50:30]; The influence of one’s social environment on their habits [54:15]; How and why habits are formed [1:00:30]; How to make or break a habit with the “Four Laws of Behavior Change” [1:09:30]; Practical tips for successful behavioral change—the best strategies when starting out [1:16:15]; Self-forgiveness and getting back on track immediately after slipping up [1:30:30]; Law #1: Make it obvious—strategies for identifying and creating cues to make and break habits [1:39:45]; Law #2: Make it attractive—ways to make a new behavior more attractive [1:47:45]; Law #3: Make it easy—the 2-minute rule [1:58:45]; Law #4: Make it satisfying—rewards and reinforcement [2:03:30]; Advice for helping others to make behavioral changes [2:06:00]; More. Learn more: https://peterattiamd.com/ Show notes page for this episode: https://peterattiamd.com/jamesclear/ Subscribe to receive exclusive subscriber-only content: https://peterattiamd.com/subscribe/ Sign up to receive Peter's email newsletter: https://peterattiamd.com/newsletter/ Connect with Peter on Facebook | Twitter | Instagram.
Transcript
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Now without further delay, here's today's episode.
I guess this week is James Clear. James is an author, entrepreneur and photographer. He is the
author of the New York Times bestseller, Atomic Habits, an easy and proven way to build good habits
and break bad ones. I wanted to interview James after reading his book
for the second time, at which point I picked up
even more from it the first time,
and I realized this is such an important part
of what we try to do in our practice,
and of course, most of us try to do in our lives,
which is change behaviors and behaviors
can really be distilled into habits.
In this episode, we talk about his background,
why this is an
interesting topic to him, but mostly we just dive really deep into the four components of what
goes into forming behavioral habits, and then of course breaking those apart, how can you
unlearn or learn de novo new habits. So I think you'll enjoy this episode if you've ever wanted
to change a behavior or create a behavior. So without further delay, please enjoy my conversation with James Clear.
James, thanks so much for making time to sit down today.
Been a while. I've wanted to sit down and chat with you.
Yeah, of course. Thank you so much for thinking about me. I'm excited to talk more.
I'm trying to think when I first read your book, because I read it twice.
And like all good books, you get more out of it,
I think the second time, in part,
because I think the deeper you get down the rabbit hole
of trying to create habits,
whether it's in yourself or helping others form habits,
the more you realize how challenging it can be.
But maybe for folks who haven't read it,
because I suspect there's going to be a bunch of people listening to this who have read it, and I want to be able to go deeper for
them and think there's going to be some people who haven't read it. Give us a bit of the history as
to why this even appealed to you. Well, first, thank you for saying that. I feel like that's the
ultimate measure of whether a book is good or not is, is it worth rereading? That's a high bar. There
are many books I've reread, but yeah, I really appreciate you taking the time to do it twice.
There are many books I've reread, but yeah, I really appreciate you taking the time to do it twice.
So what excited me about habits? I think there are a few things. The first is your building habits all the time, whether you're thinking about them or not.
So depending on which study you look at, somewhere between 40 and 50% of our behaviors seem to be automatic and habitual.
But most of the time those studies are looking at things that are
like more or less automatic, brushing your teeth, tying your shoes, unplugging the toaster after each
use. But I think the true influence of your habits is even greater than that because a lot of the
time the behaviors that you're taking are shaped or influenced by the habits that preceded them.
So you can imagine standing in line at the
grocery store or having three or four minutes free in your kitchen and you habitually pull your
phone on your pocket. The next five or ten minutes might be spent thinking carefully about what
email you're responding to or the video game you're playing or scrolling social media, but that conscious, maybe non-habitual behavior
was shaped or set by the habit of pulling your phone out.
So the reach of our habits is very wide and it's influencing our behavior all the time.
So that's one reason why it's important.
And I think that if you're going to be building habits anyway, you might as well understand what they are and how they
work and how to shape them so that you can be the architect of your habits and not the
victim of them. A lot of people feel like their habits are happening to them, like they
don't get a whole lot of influence on it. And partially, I think it's just because,
you know, it's this process your brain is going through all the time to try to automate
and make behaviors more efficient. But if you don't really know what's happening or where to adjust it, then it kind of feels
like it's happening to you rather than happening for you.
And then I would say the second thing that kind of really got me diving in deeper and thinking
about it more carefully is just the realization that most of us in life want some kind of results.
We want to get better at a skill or we want to lose weight or to make more money or reduce
stress and gain peace of mind.
And whatever the results are that you're looking for, most of the time, your results are
lagging measure of the habits that preceded them.
So your bank account is a lagging measure of your financial habits.
Your weight is a lagging measure of your nutrition and training habits.
Your knowledge is a lagging measure of your reading and learning habits.
Even like the clutter on your desk at work or in your garage is a lagging measure of
your cleaning habits.
And so, habits are not the only thing that influence outcomes in life.
You have luck and randomness, you've got misfortune,
but by definition, randomness is not under your control.
And I think the only reasonable approach
is to focus on what's in your control.
And over long time horizons,
your results tend to bend in the direction of your habits.
So I think because your brain is building habits
all the time anyway I think because your brain is building habits all the time
anyway, and because your results are heavily influenced by the habits that you repeat,
those are two primary reasons that I feel like got me interested in the topic, but also just
good reasons for anybody to be fascinated with habits. I'm guessing there's a lot of probably
evolutionary rationale for why we're creatures of habit.
Presumably the less energy we had to devote to things that would help us survive and procreate
the better. Obviously, that's why we have an autonomic nervous system that allows us to function,
you know, things like breathing and having your heart go from beating fast or beating slow to be completely
out of your voluntary control.
I'm curious as to whether or not we have a sense of, ancestrally, what types of habits
were people ever trying to deliberately change?
Maybe it's not an answerable question, but I don't know if you ever contemplated that.
When did this idea of being proactive in either breaking a habit or creating
a new habit? Do you get the sense that that is a recent luxury of our species? So I don't know the
answer to the question, but I do have some thoughts on it. And I feel like it probably does skew
somewhat recent for one particular reason, which is generally speaking, our ancestors lived in what was primarily
an immediate return environment. The majority of the decisions that you would make that
meaningfully impacted your survival were ones that were relatively immediate in nature,
so taking shelter from a storm or avoiding a lion, the savannah, or foraging for the
next meal and a berry bush. These are things that had a pretty quick payoff in your life.
If you fast forward to modern society, though, and we could define that however you want,
but probably say the last 500 years or something like that, certainly the last 100 years,
modern society seems to have created quite a few structures that favor not an immediate
return environment, but a delayed return environment.
So you go to work today so that you can get a paycheck in two weeks, or you study at school today,
so that you can graduate in four years. Save for retirement today so that you can not have to work
a couple decades from now. And there are a lot of structures that are like that in modern society that tend to reward delayed gratification. So I think in a sense, we're kind of walking through
this modern society that rewards ourselves for patience. And we still have this like
paleolithic hardware where we prioritize instant gratification and immediate returns in a
lot of ways in some kind of evolutionary sense. And you can see how there's a little bit of a mismatch there.
I wonder if it's that modern mismatch that has led to the desire to change our behavior
and to adjust habits.
And perhaps it wasn't something that we thought about as carefully or cared about as much
a thousand years ago or a five thousand years ago or longer.
It is interesting, though, to say that some aspects of modern society are mismatched
with that ancestral wiring, but some of them are not.
Why do we care about delaying gratification to get a PhD or delaying gratification to save more money?
Primarily because of the Ford some form of status, which is very hierarchical
and very, we think, evolutionarily
wired in.
So, there's still connections there, it's just that not all of it is lined.
Yeah, it seems that the vehicles that we would have used to attain status earlier were
much, quote unquote, simpler.
And today we're looking at other ways to do it.
Hearing you talk about habits that way makes me compare two activities I like very much
and contrast the challenges of learning each of them. So one is riding a bike and the other is
learning to swim. So if you took a 20-year-old who had never done both and admittedly, it's easy to
find a 20-year-old that's never swam. It's probably hard to find a 20-year-old that's never
ridden a bike. But I would pass it that it's really easy to teach a 20-year-old to ride a bike if they haven't done it.
And let's assume for a moment
this isn't someone who had never been able to do it before,
but found somebody who'd never ridden a bike at 20.
And the reason I would argue that is,
in a bike, the object is balanced.
It's really about balance.
And you get your feedback immediately.
So you know the second you're out of balance on a bike because you're in the
environment of the air and the air has a density such that it's not forgiving. Basically,
you're out of balance, you're going to fall. Conversely, although most people don't think of it
this way, swimming is also about balance in the water. You're trying to balance yourself this
way versus this way. Most people would naturally sink feet first and you're trying to balance
yourself this way so that you can breathe. And those things are not easy to do because the feedback
loop is very long and it's very hard to make the connection that you're out of balance. It also
doesn't hurt as much when you fail. So when you fall off your bike, it's very uncomfortable, but when
you're out of balance and swimming, you just have to work harder, but you don't realize why you're
working harder.
Anyway, that's why I think it's very hard to learn how to swim, and it's not very hard to learn how to ride a bike,
and therefore it requires much more deliberate practice to learn to swim than it does to ride a bike, at least at some basic level.
I'll kind of give a round of an answer here, but I'll come back to your question.
So, what is it that determines whether a habit is good or bad?
We use these phrases a lot of the time in conversation.
We say, oh, it's a bad habit, it's good habit.
And sometimes people will ask me like, well,
why do I repeat this habit if it's bad for me?
And if it's so terrible, then how come I keep coming back to it?
And I think we can divide, in a sense,
if you want to get really pedantic about
or really academic about it,
some researchers don't even like to use the word good or bad because they're habits and they
all serve you in some way.
So we could just say, basically, adaptive or maladaptive.
Right.
Yeah.
I think we could make a meaningful division in the sense of how we use it in most conversation
and say that pretty much all behaviors produce multiple outcomes across time.
Broadly speaking, we could lump it into an immediate bucket, an immediate outcome, and an
ultimate outcome.
And what you find is that for most bad habits, the immediate outcome is actually pretty favorable.
The classic example is smoking a cigarette, but if you smoke a cigarette outside the office
at 10 a.m. with a friend, well then immediately you get some socialization. Maybe it curbs your nicotine craving or just lets you like
de-stress for a couple minutes or get a break from work. There are all kinds of
things that you might be benefiting from. It's only two or five or ten years
later that the ultimate outcome is negative. With the good habits, especially the
first time you perform them, it's often the reverse. The first week of training
in the gym, your body looks the same in the mirror,
your sore, you don't really have much to show for the effort that you're putting in.
You feel kind of stupid in there.
You're wondering if people judge you or if you're doing it the wrong way.
There are a lot of upfront costs.
And it's only two or five or 10 years later that you get the outcome that you're looking for.
In a sense, the cost of your good habits is in the present, the cost of your bad habits
is in the future, and that misalignment between when you feel rewarded and when you feel
punished helps to explain why we tend to fall pretty easily into a lot of things that
we would categorize as bad, like eating donuts or smoking a cigarette or whatever, and
fall less easily into things that we would categorize as good or feels like I have to that agorizes bad, like eating donuts or smoking a cigarette or whatever, and fall
less easily into things that we would categorize as good or feels like I have to force myself
to write or whatever.
Now that's very similar to what you just mentioned about the immediacy of the feedback.
Bad habits are giving you pretty immediate feedback, kind of like riding a bike.
Good habits are giving you pretty delayed feedback, maybe a little bit analogous to swimming.
I think that example of the medium that you're in air versus water is fascinating to think about water as being
a feedback dampener. But there is another element to it, which you also mentioned, which is
the strength of the feedback. Falling on the ground off a bike and skinning your knees,
pretty painful, you learn quite quickly. Technically, making a bad stroke in the water, you don't
really pay too much of a cost if you're being sloppy with your form. It's unlikely that
you rectify that quickly. And this is a phenomenon that I think is so critical or so important
to behavior change. I called it the cardinal rule of behavior change in atomic habits,
which is behaviors that get immediately rewarded, get repeated, behaviors that get immediately
punished, get avoided. behaviors that get immediately punished,
get avoided. And it's really about the speed and the intensity of that feedback. And generally
speaking, the quicker you can get feedback, two intents is maybe a bit much, but you know,
at some point, it needs to be high enough to move the needle. It can't be so low that it doesn't
register. So you need both meaningful feedback and quick feedback if you want behavior to change. Actually, I want to come back to that topic
because I think therein lies one of the themes
of your book, right, which is that
willpower is not a great long-term strategy.
But before I get to that, I want to talk a little bit
about you personally, at least before you came
with these realizations.
I know you're an athlete, in your book,
you write about this horrible accident you had when you were playing baseball. I believe that was high school or was it in college?
Yep, software year high school. During that period of your life, were you someone that others
and your peers would have looked at you and said, oh, God, that James, that guy is so disciplined.
I mean, he just has what it takes to always get the job done and he never indulges in the wrong things and always does the right things.
Like were you one of those guys that was just a beacon of quote unquote discipliner, were you a normal guy or were you someone who had a hard time doing what was right?
Well, I wasn't someone who had a hard time, but it depends on the context.
Keep it simple like homework, sports, those things.
So with school definitely, I always liked school. I was like the nerdy kid on
the sports teams I was on. But in the science lab or something, I was like the jock, which is kind
of funny how you change based on the room that you're in. And so I always felt like I kind of
played that middle ground between those two. I think it helped me learn how to get along with
both groups and you know, was helpful socially and all that. But earlier in my life, I think I thrived more in school than I did in sports.
I barely got to play in high school.
That's one of the punchlines of that early story in the book is I've ended up playing
a total of 11 innings in high school.
Now I kind of blossomed once I got to college and ended up being an academic all-American
by the time I graduated.
But that came much later.
So, it really sort of depended on the context, but generally speaking, I would say,
yeah, people probably thought that I was disciplined, but I do think it depended on where we were.
If it was just looking at school, then I think people would say that.
If you're looking somewhere else, then maybe not.
Was there an area that you struggled with from a behavior standpoint?
To be honest, there were areas that I avoided because I thought I would struggle. So I think it was
more about me being fearful and avoiding anything I thought I would be bad at.
Then it was about watching him and being like, oh, look at him floundering around. I think I had to overcome that wiring over the course of a decade or two.
It took me a long time to start to take more risks and take on things that I didn't think I would be good at
rather than just trying to like stack the deck and just do what I thought I would do well.
I don't know how much you've paid attention to the
discussion debate around free will. I have always assumed we have free will.
This is one of those things that is kind of an anthem to me to imagine a world under
which I'm not completely under control of my own will, my behavior.
But my good friend Sam Harris, who I don't know if you were familiar with Sam's work,
yeah, I didn't episode in his podcast as well.
You're familiar with the fact that he's written extensively and spoken extensively about
the idea that we actually don't have free will, that this is an illusion.
There are examples that I can conjure up to make that case.
For example, he uses a very clever thought experiment, which is, if I tell you to think
of a movie, the first movie that pops into your head, you have no control over what that's
going to be.
Conversely, there's a part of me that thinks, okay, but there are lots of things I have free will over.
My ability to go and do something, take an action,
go and exercise or something like that.
But the deeper I get into this thinking,
the more I start to realize, well, wait a minute,
that may still be innate.
This ability that I have, using myself as an example,
to really have an easy time exercising,
it requires virtually no effort
to exercise. In fact, it usually requires a lot of effort to sometimes not exercise,
but requiring a lot of effort to mind what I eat. And I know people for whom that's not
the case, right? I know people for whom they just have an easy time eating what's healthy,
but maybe they don't like to exercise that much. Before I go any deeper into my question, let me just pause and ask you for your reaction
to that overall line of inquiry,
and how do you think about free will
as it pertains to what we're going to talk about today?
Well, first, I think I'm probably similar to you
in the sense like exercise has always been
on the easier side for me.
Nutrition's always been on the harder side,
which is kind of interesting there.
I don't know exactly what that reveals,
but it's just interesting to think about where you have certain inclinations,
and maybe not others. With respect to free will, I understand the argument. Once you start to walk
through, it's like, okay, yeah, there's this very long chain of atoms that are essentially
colliding and leading us inevitably to the next action or the next thought or whatever, and if we could
map them all out, then perhaps we could just predict everything that's about to happen.
I get that as a thought experiment. I tend to, when I'm living my daily life, fall in the same space that sounds like you fall in, which is,
well, I'm going to continue to act as if I have free will. And ultimately, the more that I think about it, I usually come down on that side where it's like, listen,
the truth is nobody knows the answer one way or another.
We have good arguments, perhaps, for each, but nobody knows for sure.
If it is all predetermined, then it kind of doesn't really matter.
I'm going to do this anyway.
And if it isn't predetermined, I might as well choose the thing that I think best serves
me.
So whether I'm making that choice that best serves me or whether it was predetermined that I'm going to make the good choice, it kind of doesn't really matter to me. So whether I'm making that choice that best serves me or whether it was pre-determined
that I'm going to make the good choice, it kind of doesn't really matter to me like I might as well
choose to act that way. So I don't know, I would be very curious to hear what Sam's thought on
that is, but I, from a practical standpoint, I don't see a reason to not choose the best option that
you can. In the event that you do have free will,
you'll be glad that you chose it.
In the event that you don't have free will,
you didn't get to say anyway, so who cares?
I guess what I do that is,
it might be that free will or the absence of free will
is what determines a person's,
maybe call it genetic propensity to change habits
or form habits.
There may be some people for whom
that is easier than others.
But that's probably a spectrum. And it doesn't imply that a person who struggles with a given
behavior can't learn to master it. Again, using an example, I'll never be a Michael Phelps.
Ever. There is no scenario under which I was going to be as good a swimmer as Michael Phelps.
So even if he hadn't started swimming till he was 15 and my parents threw me in the water
at two, I was never going to be that good.
But it doesn't mean I couldn't learn to swim.
And similarly, had he never been thrown in the pool, we would never have heard his name.
So I guess that's how I kind of rationalize it, which is there are going to be people
for whom it is easier to go through the exercises that we're going to talk about.
And there are people for whom that's just going to be more difficult, and you can't change
that part of it.
That's the part, I guess, that is set.
Yeah.
A couple of thoughts to add onto that.
I thought of this when you first brought this up a few minutes ago.
I don't know if you're familiar.
David Epstein has worked on sports, gene, and range, and so on. David's great, and a good friend of mine, a few minutes ago. I don't know if you're familiar, David Epstein has worked on sports gene and range and so on.
David's great and a good friend of mine,
a really nice guy and just very thoughtful
with the way he puts arguments together,
which I always appreciate.
And I was having a conversation with him
about some of this stuff.
And he said one of the things that surprised him
when he was researching the sports gene
is that characteristics that he thought
would be mostly genetic, strength and speed and things like that
turned out to be heavily influenced by training and choice and a lot of other stuff.
And qualities that he thought would be a choice like grit and perseverance and desire to train
turned out to have a much higher genetic component than he realized.
I always love the examples, I think this is in sports
gene who talks about Steffi graph just happened to be in a tennis study when she was young. She was
like 14 or something and she was part of this cohort of young Germans that were being studied.
And she not only tested the highest for physical abilities like strength and speed and
quickness and so on, but also tested the highest for competitiveness and desire to train
and all these other things. I just love when combinations like that come together.
Like, think about how pointless this is to competing against her. Not only is she better than you,
she also wants it more. So I do think that there's a heavy genetic component to some of the mental
characteristics that would make you more likely to train some of these aspects or more interested
in some things
than others.
To your point about Phelps, whether he had ever been dropped in the pool or not, on the
surface it seems like something that would make you less motivated.
You would say, oh, well, why even try?
I'm never going to be Michael Phelps.
Or if genes play such a large role, what's the point?
But I actually think that's the wrong lesson to take away.
The primary lesson I think is that genes don't tell you not to work hard.
They tell you where to work hard.
Or they don't tell you not to have a strategy.
They just inform your strategy.
This is another line that David told me in a conversation once we said,
a lot of people talk about grit and perseverance and discipline.
But what if that is just your natural propensity based on the thing that you're working on?
What if I just happened to look kind of gritty in my terms of weight training or working
writing a book compared to the average person? But I just look that way because I happen to like
those things. And he said, yeah, there's this whole line of thinking that like grit is fit.
And so actually the way to increase your perseverance and discipline is to find areas or categories or skills where you're highly interested
in them. It's very hard to beat the person who's having fun because they're going to want to keep
working longer than the person who's suffering. So grit is fit, I think, is one way in which you can
maybe try to stack the deck or stack the odds in your favor and get your jeans aligned with the things that you're working on.
And then there are going to be things like Michael Phelps in a pool where you're like,
listen, this body was just designed to do this thing.
It's very hard to find somebody who's more optimally designed to move through the water than him.
Not all of us are going to have the good fortune of discovering whatever
that thing is for us in our lives at age 4 or 6 or whatever. I don't think that that means
you should stop searching. This is one of the benefits of trial and error. The person
who is curious and willing to explore a lot of things is more likely to come across an
area where they are fascinated or they are interested and it also is a really good fit for their natural abilities or propensities.
That's kind of the primary lesson that I take away from the genetic side of things is similar to what you said.
Anybody can improve, doesn't mean anybody can be Michael Phelps,
but you can always improve your ability.
And let's try to find that thing that I'm fascinated with that I'm interested in.
So where it doesn't feel like I'm suffering in the same way that other people are when they're trying this thing.
You often be surprised how far you can go, how willing you are to build habits and improve
skills if you find some of those things that you're truly fascinated by.
Two comments I'd add to that one completely tried, but amusing, which is not only does
Phelps have the perfect chassis and engine for what he does, but just as you
described, Stephie Grave, I've seen Phelps race at meats that meant nothing.
So total throwaway meats, he's not shaved, he's not tapered, he couldn't care less to
be there.
He's swimming like a 200 I am.
It doesn't look like he's going to win at all, and yet in the last 15 meters he out touches everybody. I've seen this on enough occasions that I just think
like this is a guy who hates losing. So even though he's not necessarily in shape
at this moment, even though this meat means nothing for him, he's training through
it and half the people he's competing against, this is their pinnacle, he hates
losing so much. So it is, it's really the perfect combination. I have that same takeaway watching the last dance.
There was that one summer where he was recording space jam
and they set up like a tent for him outside the movie studio.
And all the NBA players came in like each night
to play pick up games.
Just got done filming like 12 hours a day,
but he just could not handle losing a pick up game
and would just bother him so much to not get it right,
to not win.
I got to think that that is maybe not exclusively, using a pickup game, it would just bother him so much to not get it right, to not win.
I got to think that that is maybe not exclusively, but at least largely, he can't turn it off.
He doesn't know any other way to be.
Personality or genes or whatever you want to call it, that's just how he's wired.
And I actually love it when I see that characteristic in any domain.
Maggie Rogers, who's a musician, she had this post she put on Instagram. It was all
of her notes on a particular song that they were working on. I'm like, you know, hey, I think we
need to bring the symbol in second earlier here and a bunch of other stuff. And then she shared a
little clip of her listening to it with her producer and so on. And you could just tell that she
cared so much about the details. It would bother her if the song was not as good as it could possibly be.
And maybe that's the musician's version of Hates to Lose.
I love it when I see that characteristic.
It kind of lights me up.
It makes me want to be that way about
whatever thing I'm working on.
If you can find that area where it would bother you
for it to not be right,
I gotta think you're gonna get much better results there
than most people, because most people get bored or move on or get tired or frustrated and the person who just
will not stop unless it's right is going to end up with better results. It sounds simple
to say the way to have great results is to not lower your standards, but in a lot of ways
it turns out to be more true than you would expect. I love watching this in the best of the best.
Formula One is one of my favorite sports, and historically my hero is this guy named
Ayartan Senna, and to hear him be-
I watched Senna that documentary.
I'd never heard of him.
I know very little about Formula One.
It was awesome.
After watching that, I was like completely hooked.
This is fascinating sport.
You gather from that documentary. I mean, he was a perfectionist even amongst his
peers. He took it to a level that exceeded that. It actually cost him his life. I don't
think the documentary fully explains how much that need to win killed him because the
day he died, he was trying to do something in a car that shouldn't have been done at
a time when it shouldn't have been done. But it's amazing when in a sport like that where the stakes are so high for trying to do something at the expense of
maybe a mechanical limit or a limit of the car. But yet all drivers will tell you they're
going to go for it. If there's a gap, they're going to go for the gap. And there was a debate
in the 90s in Formula One. So Senna's death changed the sport forever because that's
really what changed the imposed safety in the sport. So Senna's death changed the sport forever because that's really what changed
the imposed safety in the sport. But the debate prior to that was, look, we'll just tell the drivers
to drive slower. They don't have to drive this fast. They can choose to drive 10% slower, which,
of course, was nonsense. The head of the FIA at the time, who has just recently passed away,
made a point, which was that that's the dumbest thing you could ever say.
They will all choose to have a less safe car
if it goes faster because you're talking about
the 20 most competitive drivers on the planet.
Now, there was another point I was gonna make
that was for most of us, we will never know
what it's like to be the top thousand in the world of anything.
If I think about all the things that I love, driving a race car, shooting my bow and arrow,
you know, exercise and bow, I mean, I'm multiple orders of magnitude, beneath, even the most
lowly ranked professional of those things. And this gets into something else, which is for me at least,
the joy is not in the absolute comparison of myself to others, but the relative comparison
of where I was before. Do you think that's a universal thing? Is it universal that people
are mostly engaged by how much they are making progress relative to their own performance.
Or do you think that there are some people who are only capable of finding pleasure when being compared to others in an absolute basis? The second half of that question, I'm not sure of.
Generally, I think both of those things are universal. I think one, it's universal that one of the
most motivating feelings to the human mind is the feeling of progress. And I think it's fairly universal
that progress feels good.
In a sense that the most base level,
we are goal-directed organisms in the sense
that we have a goal to get food or water
or to procreate or to be safe.
And we want to move toward those things
and resolve the tension, the gap
between that goal and our current state as much as possible.
Now, with our complex brains and modern society, we come up with many other goals that are outside of just our basic needs like food and water.
We have goals like getting a promotion at work or losing 10 pounds or whatever it is.
But that same tension between where you are currently and where you want to be, we want to have that resolved.
The more progress that you feel like you're making toward one of those things,
I think that generally feels good. I feel like that's pretty universal.
I also do think it seems to be fairly universal that we have some bias toward status,
some bias toward prestige and rank and hierarchy,
and it feels good for pretty much anybody to win the game or to have the
best score on the scoreboard or to climb the leaderboard. And the more that you see yourself occupying
a higher run relative to those around you, whether it's with wealth or money or fame, the better that
feels too. And it probably is a spectrum or maybe each of those is a spectrum, and some people have the dial turned up real high on the status part, and maybe lower on the internal measures,
and other people have it the reverse.
But I generally think we all have them to some degree, and you probably will find yourself
feeling good if you happen to succeed on either of those metrics.
And how much of it do you think is for lack of a better term journey versus destination
focused?
Because if you talk about your example of weight loss, that is generally a very destination
based metric.
I want to lose 10 pounds.
Not going to be happy until I lose 10 pounds.
The process of how I go about doing it, changing the way I'm eating, changing my exercise,
accepting the fact that you're not going to lose 10 pounds. Linearly, it's going to look like this.
Those are details that I'm willing to tolerate, but I want to lose those 10 pounds, or I want
to fit into this piece of clothing that I used to fit into.
Contrast that with, I want to learn to speak Italian.
I'm enjoying this process of learning a few new words every day and learning how the structure
of this grammar works
relative to my native tongue.
And I'm never gonna be perfectly fluent in Italian,
but I know that in some point I'm gonna be completely functional.
This journey of learning this new language
or learning how to play this instrument,
that's what's giving me the pleasure.
And I don't know if that distinction makes sense.
First I should say,
this is coming from someone who's been very goal oriented
for most of
their life.
I would set goals for the grades I wanted to get in school for the wait.
I wanted to lift in the gym for the numbers I wanted my business to hit.
And at some point, I actually found this sheet that I made my sophomore year of college
for the goals that I wanted to hit by the time I graduated.
It was funny looking back on it, like 10 or 11 years later,
because about half of them I hit the other half I didn't,
and I was like, obviously setting the goal
was not the thing that made the difference.
If it did, I would hit them all.
So something else is going on here.
It was like a little remedial training session
for myself or something,
realizing that goals are not the primary thing
that drives results.
And in fact, if you look at the performance in most domains, the winners and the losers
have the same goal. Presumably, every Formula One driver has the goal of winning the race,
that when they take off from the starting line. If you have a job opening and a hundred candidates
apply for the job, presumably every candidate has the goal of giving the job.
The goal is not the thing that makes the difference in the performance, and if the winners and
the losers have the same goal, it cannot be the distinguishing factor.
Maybe it's necessary, perhaps there's an argument necessary for success, but it's not sufficient
for it.
So that got me thinking more like, well, what is it than that drives it?
And I, in the book, the way that I described is the difference between systems and goals.
Your goals, your desired outcome, your target, the thing you're shooting for, your system
is the collection of daily habits that you follow, all these little gears in this overall
machine.
And if there's ever a gap between your desired outcome and your daily habits, if there's
ever a gap between your goal and your system,
your daily habits will always win. Almost by definition, your current habits are perfectly designed for your current results. So whatever system you've been running for the last six months or
year or whatever, you talked about shooting a bone arrow, presumably whatever system of movements you
have going on there, pre-shot routine, how you draw it back, everything.
It kind of is inevitably carrying you toward the result of where the arrow ends up.
The irony of all of this is we also badly want better results in life.
You know, we also badly want to make more money or to reduce stress or lose weight or whatever.
But the results are not actually the thing that needs to change.
It's kind of like fixed inputs and the outputs will fix themselves.
There are some areas like shooting a bow where that is the connection is quite obvious,
but there are other areas where for whatever reason we don't see it as clearly, but I think
the pattern is still there, which is let's adjust the habits, let's get this machine
running in a more fluid fashion,
and you'll find that the results kind of come naturally.
I think just appreciating that helped rewire mindset
a little bit.
I was so focused on outcomes and goals for a long time
and now realizing that actually the way this is driven
is with the system.
That helped me shift from what I would say now is like,
goals are for people who care about winning one time.
You set a goal to run a half marathon and you train for three months and you do it and you complete the race.
But then maybe you stop training after that.
But systems are for people who care about winning again and again.
And if you care about sustaining that success, then you're like, I'm a runner.
I care about the system that I'm building for how I train, how many miles I'm getting in, all kinds of other stuff. And whether I
have a half marathon, three months in the distance or not, it doesn't really matter because
I'm going to be running my system either way. Making that mental shift, I think, can be
useful for sustaining results.
So, let's talk about habits now, because I think that's the thing that as you said, basically
shapes the nature of what we're going to do.
There's a saying that many people have said and I won't even try to paraphrase it because at the moment
it's escaping me, but the gist of it is like you don't rise to level of your training. You fall to the level or you fall to level of your training and
the original quote, I think it's from Arca Locus, I believe a Greek philosopher and
The original quote, I think it's from ArcoLocus, I believe a Greek philosopher and said, you don't rise to the level of your expectations, you fall to the level of your training.
And in Atomic Habits, I tweaked that or adjusted that to say, you don't rise to the level
of your goals, you fall to the level of your systems.
And so it's actually your habits that kind of create that baseline.
Why isn't called Atomic Habits?
I remember when I first saw the title,
my assumption was atomic must be huge explosion, like big habits, which of course is exactly
not what it means. So it's interesting which meanings people pull out when they see it.
So I chose the phrase atomic habits for three reasons. The first meaning of the word atomic
is tiny or small, like an atom. And I do think habits should be small and fairly easy to do, especially in the beginning.
The second meaning of the word atomic is the fundamental unit in a larger system.
That's the one that people often overlook.
Atoms build into molecules, molecules build into compounds, and so on.
And your habits are kind of like that.
Each little habit is like an atom in the overall routine of your day.
You put them all together and you end up with your lifestyle or your daily routine.
And then the third and final meaning is the one that you mentioned, the source of immense energy or power.
And I think if you put all three meanings together, you sort of understand the narrative,
arc of the book, which is make changes that are small and easy to do,
which is make changes that are small and easy to do,
layer them on top of each other, like units in a larger system or atoms in a molecule.
Collectively, you can get some really powerful or remarkable results.
And so I feel like the phrase Atomic Habits not only encapsulates that kind of
small change in the system that you're looking to build,
but also the powerful results that can emanate from that.
So you talk about three different types of change.
Outcome, change, the process change.
We've touched on a little bit of those,
but the one we haven't really touched on
is this identity change.
That was something that, when I read your book,
really resonated because it provided,
I think, a very decent explanation,
at least for why exercise comes naturally to me, which is
it's so hardwired into my identity, and why maybe certain other habits I've tried to create
over time don't come easily to me, because I haven't fully identified with them yet.
So expand on that, but also how you came to realize that.
Two things before I unpack the idea a little more fully.
First is of all the ideas in the book,
this is probably the least scientific.
There are actually some studies which I cite in that chapter
and it's not like there's no science behind it,
but the majority of the book I try to be very robust
in the way that I was thinking about how do we build habits
and what actually gets in the stick.
And they're also just a bazillion social psychology and cognitive psychology studies that illustrate
a lot of the examples that I talk about.
But this is more of a mindset, I would say, or philosophy on how behavior change works.
The second thing is it's maybe the only unique idea that I have.
Pretty much everything else that I share is stuff that's been widely covered by other
people or things that we've known for hundreds of thousands of years. But I felt
like this was something that maybe I could contribute to the conversation. Part of the reason I started
thinking about it is I started asking why do habits really matter? We seem to care about them a lot
as a society. It's something a lot of books get written about, something we talk about a lot.
lot as a society. It's something a lot of books get written about, something we talk about a lot.
There's clearly some kind of deeper importance to them. So what is it? The surface level answer is that we care about habits because they get us these external things. They make us more productive
and more fits and so on. Habits can help you do all that stuff, which is great. But I think the real
reason, the deeper reason that habits matter is that they
are a signal internally to ourselves about who we are and what we care about, and they're kind of
a signal of like the story that we're telling ourselves. So in a sense, every time that you perform
a habit, you are embodying a particular identity. When you make your bed, you embody the identity of someone who's
clean and organized. When you shoot a basketball for 30 minutes, you embody the identity of someone
who is a basketball player. You do those things once or twice, it doesn't radically transform the
story you have about yourself. But if you keep showing up and shooting a basketball every day for
six months or two years or at some point, you cross this sort of invisible threshold where you're like, yeah, being a basketball player is like part of who I am.
Some aspect of my identity. And so your habits provide evidence. They provide proof of the story
that you're telling yourself. And that, I think, is a very powerful thing, a very deep personal thing
that habits can provide. And perhaps the real reason why they matter.
So to come back to your question about process versus outcome versus identity, where how
we change, usually when people set out to make some kind of change, they start by thinking
about the results of the outcome that they want.
So they say, I want to lose 40 pounds in the next six months.
And then from that outcome, they back into a process or a plan. So they say,
all right, if I want to lose 40 pounds, then I need to follow this nutrition plan. I'm going to
need to work out four days a week. And maybe there are details to those plans and everything, but
that's usually kind of roughly where it stops. And then the assumption is if I do those things,
and I lose that weight, then I'll be the kind of person that I wanna be.
The argument that I try to unpack in that chapter
is what if we worked backwards from this?
What if instead we said who is the type of person
I wish to be?
What is the identity that I'd like to have?
And in fact, we could even ask the person
who has that identity, what kind of habits would they have?
And then we use that identity to inform
the process, the habits, and we let the outcomes come naturally. There are a variety of examples
of this. I, one reader of mine, she lost a bunch of weight, I think it was 110 pounds
in total, and she's kept it off for over a decade. And the question that she sort of carried
around with her is she was starting her weightlust journey is what would a healthy person do. And that's very much aligned or oriented
with that identity piece. It's like, okay, would a healthy person take a cab or would they
walk for blocks in the next meeting? Would they order a salad and chicken at lunch or would
they have a hamburger in fries? And she could just kind of carry that question around
with her to every context she was in and make a choice that she felt like aligned with the identity that she wanted to have
Rather than worrying necessarily about something specific like the number of macros she's getting or you know, whatever
Now I should say I think it can work both ways like I count my macros and works really well for me
But I think that's partially because it aligns with the identity that I already
have.
And if you don't have that shift in internal story yet, it's hard for the behavior to
follow suit.
Imagine you went up to two people, you said, hey, would you like a cigarette?
And the first person says, oh no, thanks, I'm trying to quit.
And the second person says, oh no, thanks, I'm not a smoker.
Technically, they've done the same thing.
They both turned down the cigarette.
But the second person kind of has signaled a shift in identity change. The first person is trying
to be something they're not. No thanks I'm trying to quit. And the second person is saying,
I'm not a smoker. It's just not something that I do. I think once you get to that stage,
that shift in identity, you're in a much more powerful place
from a behavior change standpoint,
because you're not even really trying to change anymore.
You're just acting in alignment
with the type of person you see yourself to be.
So we can talk about ways to do that,
but that's kind of the quick version
on identity versus outcome.
Tell me what you think the difference is
in identity between the woman you gave the example of
and say yourself?
So you're both striving to the same objective, which is a healthy weight, but she accomplished
it by focusing on what would a healthy person do in this situation.
You accomplish it again, just pertaining to nutrition at the moment, presumably by saying,
I don't know what your macro goals are, but these are the aspirations
that I have and I'm going to stick to these.
So tell me a little bit about the difference between those approaches and how can a person
know which will be better for them outside of just empirically trying them both.
Well, I think in this particular case, the primary difference is I had an internal story
or have an internal story that I am a healthy person already.
And so just doing things that are aligned with that, like counting macros, feels totally
fine.
Whereas for her at that early stage, she did not feel that way and did not genuinely
believe that about herself.
It's possible to have an epiphany and to change cold turkey or to just flip a switch and
suddenly start acting in a different way.
I do think it's possible.
I think sometimes people have experiences like that.
Ironically, I think it rarely happens for some kind of bolts of lightning inside.
I think one of the most common ways it happens is by reading books.
I think people will sometimes read a book that really changes their world view
and they start to do things completely differently after that.
You can imagine a bunch of nutrition examples like somebody reads a book that
convinces them that carbs are the devil and the grain is terrible all of a sudden the next
day, like they want to throw out all the bread in the house and it's very quick switch has
been flipped. So I do think it's possible. However, I don't think that changing through
an epiphany is a very reliable way to change. And I don't know that it's something you can bank on or can plan around or strategize
for.
It might happen to you a couple of times in your life.
I don't think that it's an efficient way to try to build a new habit.
So if you can't change or hope to change through an epiphany, then what are your options
if you want to change your identity?
And I think the best avenue that you have is to cast votes with your
actions. So in a sense, every action you take is like a vote for the type of person you
wish to become. So no, doing one push up does not radically transform your body, but it
does cast a vote for on the type of person who doesn't miss workouts. And no, writing
one sentence may not finish the novel, but it does cast
a vote for I'm a writer. I think this is like a meaningful difference between my approach or what
I recommend and what you often hear, like you often hear something like fake it till you make it.
I don't necessarily have anything wrong with fake it till you make it. It's asking you to believe
something positive about yourself, but it's asking you to believe something positive without having evidence for it. And we have
a word for beliefs that don't have evidence. We call that delusion. Like at some point,
your brain doesn't like this mismatch between what you're saying and what you're actually
doing. And so to bring it back to your question about my friend who lost all this weight,
I think you have to genuinely believe that story about yourself in order for the actions to start to feel aligned.
And what do you do if you don't genuinely believe you're a healthy person or don't genuinely believe that I'm the kind of person who attract my macros or whatever?
Well, I think you have to start with these very small habits. You have to start by proving it to yourself in some little way.
small habits. You have to start by proving it to yourself in some little way. Maybe it's just that you did walk the three blocks to the meeting and didn't take the taxi, or maybe it's just that you
did order a salad for lunch and not a burger in fries. And none of those things individually are
going to change your body or even the story right away. But if you keep casting votes for that
behavior and keep casting votes for that identity, then eventually
you get to the point where it's like the basketball example. You kind of have to admit that you're
a basketball player because you've been shooting hoops for the last two years and like this is just
part of who you are now. So I think that that's the primary difference between the two of us is
that I already kind of had that story and early on she didn't. Now she does. So who knows, maybe
now she could just track her macros just as easily or even easier than I can.
I don't know, but I think that that shift there.
Yeah, I was kind of curious to ask about that
because I wonder how that process changes
in this person after 10 years.
I mean, most people understand that losing weight
is actually not that hard, but keeping weight off
is exceptionally hard.
So what your friend did, yeah, it's losing 110 pounds is remarkable, but the fact that she's kept it off for a decade is actually what's remarkable.
And I'm curious as to what the temporal sequence of events is where,
hey, for the first year, it was a daily struggle of what would the healthy person do?
What would the healthy person do? what would the healthy person do, what would the
healthy person do, what would the healthy person do?
And at some point that transitions into, I'm a healthy person, this is what I do, I'm
a healthy person, this is what I do.
And then it becomes so autonomic that you can slip up for a day and it feels wrong.
Like, oh, God, that cotton candy is horrible.
Like, I don't ever want to eat that again.
Yeah.
Well, you said something similar to that a few minutes ago
about how like it bothers you to not work out sometimes.
Near a y'all who also is written about habits
has kind of a little measure for that reason.
Like his measure for whether it's a habit or not
is does it bother you when you don't do it?
I think that's a signal that it's kind of aligned
with your identity.
It's like, oh, it kind of feel like I'm not being me
if I don't do this.
So you're point about it taking a long time.
It can take much longer than you would think.
I mean, my friend told me she had to lose 60 pounds before the first person noticed,
before I actually ever heard anything from somebody else.
That's a lot of weight and a long time to be working in essentially what feels like
a vacuum, feels like you're just doing it for yourself and no external feedback from
the world.
So, this comes back to a lot of the things we've already talked about, about process and following up with the system and a lot of things that go into it. But it
definitely is an internal journey and it definitely will take longer than you would imagine
in a lot of cases. One of the most common examples that I hear of in my practice for the epiphany
behavior change that sticks is the person who quits smoking the day their child is born.
And I've always found this interesting, right? Because the day before their child is born,
they clearly know how bad smoking is. There's nobody who's smoking who doesn't understand the risks
of it. And by the same token, who doesn't, as you pointed out earlier, enjoy the benefits of it in
the short run, very rewarding in the short run, very rewarding in the short run,
very damaging in the long run.
That's completely understood intellectually.
On day X, they have a child and they decide,
I'm done with this,
I'm not gonna have smoke in my household
because I also know the benefits of secondhand smoke
or the harm rather of secondhand smoke
and I'm not gonna expose my child to this.
And yet amazingly, I mean, over and over and over again,
I hear these stories from patients saying,
yep, I grew up in a household where my parents were
incredible smokers and the second I was born,
they stopped and that was 40 years ago
and they've never had a cigarette since.
Is there a transference process here
where because it involves the life of another person,
it's easier to make this change stick?
Possibly, I mean, I'm sure there are a lot of variables
that go into it, but it does
align with, there's like this whole category of behaviors that I feel like, if you wanted
to hack a radical change in your life, you wanted to figure out a way to get, like you
said, this epiphany to stick, massive environment changes or lifestyle changes are a good way
to do that. Perhaps one of the strongest ways to do that. So having a kid, getting married,
changing jobs, moving to a different city, even something small like getting a dog can lead to
rapid behavior change. And I think one of the things that is really crucial about it is that most
of those decisions tend to be irreversible or at least very hard to reverse. I had one that I struggled with for a long time.
Sometimes people ask me, you know, what habits have you struggled with or whatever?
And I tend to be pretty good about getting enough sleep.
I almost always get eight hours or even nine if I'm training hard, but I would fall into
this pattern where it'd be like nine or 10 o'clock at night and I would kind of get a second
wind and they'd be like, well, maybe I'll just send a few emails or something. And of course, it's never just
a few. You turn around, it's midnight or one. And you're like, okay, am I going to sleep
for eight hours? Because if so, that means I'm not getting up till nine. And I know that
I prefer to get up early. I know that I feel better throughout the rest of the next day.
10 p.m. James is kind of ruining things for tomorrow, James, by staying up late. And I try
to bunch of different things.
There's a little device called an outlet timer.
You can buy it for like 10 bucks on Amazon.
You plug it into an outlet and you can set the time for when it kills the power from that
outlet.
And so like if you plug your internet into it, then like the internet shuts off at 10
p.m.
or whatever you set it for.
So I tried different things like that, but then you could just pick your phone up and
get around it.
But the thing that finally made it stick was getting a dog.
Because the dog is gonna get up at 7 a.m.
whenever I go to sleep, it doesn't matter,
and I need to go take it for a walk,
and you can only do that for a few days before you're like,
all right, I'm not gonna play this game anymore,
I'm going to bed at 10.
It's because it was fairly hard to reverse
that got it to stick.
And I think, you know, in the case of having a kid, they're going to be there every day now.
Maybe you could rationalize it a bunch of times before that, but that's not going to change.
They're going to be around.
And weirdly, because presumably this person's wife was pregnant, so they obviously saw
that throughout the whole pregnancy, but that didn't get them to change.
But once the child is there, man, it's really immediate.
You're taking a puff and you have those little eyes
looking back at you.
The feedback loop is even tighter than before.
So I would imagine both of those things probably play a role.
But more generally speaking,
those kind of irreversible or hard to reverse lifestyle
changes also tend to be big drivers of quick
behavior change.
I can only think of one dramatic habit I changed
that has stuck and it is the silliest thing,
but I always bit my nails growing up, bite them nonstop.
And veribly what happens is you'd get a little infection
because you bite too close and it was like,
my mom was always like, God, that is such a disgusting habit.
Like, it's just looked horrible.
The day I decided to change it was the day I got my first interview for med school.
You applied to medical school and then all of a sudden the envelope start coming in
and you've got these interviews just as I got that first envelope and I realized, oh,
I'm actually going to go and be interviewing, at least for me,
I didn't interview to go to college.
This was the first time I had to do an interview.
And I don't know, just something came over me.
I was like, wait a second, dude, you can't be the guy that's showing up to an interview
with these horrible looking nails.
You have to cut this out.
You are going to get a nail clipper and you are going to start clipping your nails like
a civilized human being.
And that was, I don't know, 25 years ago.
And today, like when my nails get long,
I'm a guy who likes short nails, so I'm always sort of trimming them. I can't imagine
that I once bit them. It just seems so strange to me. It's a silly example. I don't think
it is actually. We all have habits that are like that. There's two things that made me
think. The first is it connects to our conversation about identity from a few minutes ago, which
is you started to take pride in it. You cared about how you
presented. And the more that we take pride in certain elements of our identity
or aspects of who we are, certain parts of our story, the more strongly that
behavior starts to stick. You can imagine a woman who takes pride in how her
hair looks. She probably has all kinds of hair care habits and products and things that she does, and she probably doesn't have to convince herself
to do them the same way that we talk about convincing ourselves with a lot of other habits.
Oh, I wish I could write or I wish I would work out or whatever. It's just an element
of her identity. She takes pride in and shows she does it like fairly consistently, or the
guy who gets complimented on the size of his biceps.
And so he just never skips arm day in the gym
because it's an aspect of his identity
that he takes pride in.
What I'm kind of getting at is like,
what parts of your story do you take pride in?
And once you start to take pride in it,
man, you'll fight for it pretty hard to keep it.
And in many cases, you'll find yourself doing it
somewhat naturally or at least internally motivated
to continue doing it.
So that was the first piece, the second piece,
and this is something that since atomic habits has come out,
I think is even more important than I realized
when I was writing the book,
which is the influence of the social environment
on your habits.
So in your case, the Med School interviews,
it was actually the image in your mind, the
expectation about what other people might think and how you would present in that interview
and so on, the judgment of others, essentially, that help drive that change. And if you look
at behaviors that really stick, the ones that tend to stick for 10 or 20 or 30 years a long time, there's often
a strong social component involved.
So for example, we are all part of multiple tribes.
Some of those tribes are large, like what it means to be American, or some of those
tribes are small, like being a member of your CrossFit gym or being a neighbor on your street.
Take the neighborhood example.
You might walk outside
and see your neighbor mowing their grass on Wednesday night or something and think, oh, I need
to cut my lawn. And you'll stick with that habit of mowing your grass for 20 or 30 years or how
long you live in that house. Like we wish we had that level of consistency with most of our other habits.
And why do you do it? Partially you do it because it feels good
to have a clean lawn, but mostly you do it
because you don't want to be judged
by the other people in the neighborhood
for being the sloppy one.
And so it's actually that social norm,
that expectation for what it means to be part of this
neighborhood and how you act in this group or this tribe
that helps get the habit to stick.
I think the practical takeaway there,
if you really want to behavior change to last, is to join groups where your desired behavior is
the normal behavior. Because if it's normal in that group, it's going to seem much more normal
and typical for you to do it. I mean, Peter, I'm sure you're part of multiple groups that do what
most people would determine are like weird habits. Like, I'm sure you're part of multiple groups that do what most people would determine are like weird habits.
Like, I'm sure there's a group of friends
who are really into driving cars.
And there's probably another group
who's like really into bow hunting and archery.
And there are all kinds of habits
that these little tribes do.
And it might seem strange to the normal person,
but it's probably very casual or typical or easy,
relatively, for you to stick to those habits,
especially when you're part to those habits, especially when
you're part of those groups or talking with those guys, because it's just part of something
that it's part of what they do.
And I think maybe the deeper lesson here is that we don't just do habits because of the
results they get us.
We also take behaviors because they are a signal to the people around us that, hey, I get it.
I fit in.
I understand how to act in this group.
Most people, if they have to choose between having the habits they want to have, but they
kind of go against the grain of the group, they like, don't really fit in well.
They get ostracized or having habits that they don't really love, but they get to go along with the crowd,
they fit in, they get praised for being part of the group. Most people will choose belonging
over loneliness. Like the desire to belong will overpower the desire to improve. And so you want to
make sure you get those two things aligned to join groups where your desired behavior is the normal
behavior. I wonder if part of the queue for me was buying a suit and it was the first suit I had.
That was sort of a, wait a minute, you're wearing a suit.
Think of the trouble you're going to get this thing and then this tie that you're going
to wear and blah, blah, blah, blah, all this sort of stuff.
But it's interesting.
And then clearly it just became a part of my identity, which is I'm a person who has nice fingernails. I
present well from the fingernail standpoint, at least. Hasn't translated to all of my habits.
But let's talk about the four laws, because these four laws are kind of the central tenets
to what we speak about. And they can be inverted as well, which I think is important as we think about creating,
call it adaptive habits versus breaking maladaptive habits.
So what's the first law?
Real quick, before we get into these four,
I just want to explain the framework a little bit.
In particular for this episode or this show,
because I feel like your audience will appreciate it
more than most audiences.
So I like to divide a habit into four stages.
And as you said, those four stages kind of have
what I call the four laws of behavior change
that come out of it.
But when I was working on atomic habits
and researching this framework
and trying to understand why behaviors happen
and how do they happen, how to have its form,
I had a couple questions that I felt like
previous frameworks did not answer that well.
While researching the book, I was able to find 40 different models of human behavior that
biologists and neuroscientists and psychologists, a bunch of different industries had come
up with over the last, say, about 150 years.
Broadly speaking, those models of human behavior tended to fall into one of two categories.
The first category or what I would call like motivation models, so they explain things
like internal drives and motivations and cravings and kind of like what compels us to act.
And then the second category were what I would call reinforcement models.
And so they described the rewards that we get from behaviors and how those things kind
of reinforce our behavior.
And essentially what happens like after an action.
And what I wanted to do was try to come up with a model
that I felt like accurately described both,
the motivation that may come before
and the reinforcement that may come after
and how those things influence the actions that we take.
And there were a variety of what I thought
were fairly simple questions about human
behavior that weren't totally answered by the previous models, so things like what causes somebody
to try to have it in the first place. You haven't experienced the reward at that point, so why would
you take the first bite of a pancake or the first smoke of the cigarette? What would motivate you
to do that? I'm sorry, I would be off Skinner, stimulus response reward, Charles Duhig and Power of Habit, kind of popularized as Q routine reward,
but we say, okay, habits are a Q, and then there's the action, and there's some kind of outcome.
Well, how come two people respond differently to the same thing? Like, why would one person see a
cigarette and feel like, oh, I have to smoke, and another person's like, I'm never smoked
today in my life, I'm not interested at all? Because if it's just the cue that leads to the action, you would think they would do the
same thing.
Why would the same person respond differently to the same cue?
How come when I walk in my kitchen at 7 a.m., I see a loaf of bread and I think, oh, I'm
going to make some toast for breakfast.
But then I walk in at 4 p.m., and I see that same cue, and I don't think anything of it,
I just move on.
So to summarize all of this, I think one of the meaningful distinctions about the four
stages that I put together and why I feel I can accurately describe human behavior and
sort of the insight that I came across as I was researching.
A neuroscientist named Lisa Feldman-Barrott, she has a bunch of studies and a couple books
on this topic, one book in particular that was
useful for me while I was researching is called How Emotions Are Made. The key insight is that
we often think that human behavior is reactive in the sense that somebody does something and I
respond or somebody says something and I feel a certain way. But in fact, human behavior is mostly
predictive. You are kind of endlessly going through your experience in life
predicting about what to do next. It's actually this prediction that I think was the key thing that
was missing from a lot of the previous models of habits and behavior. So with that as a primer,
before we do that, I think you wrote about this in the book, which was that the dopaminergic surge
comes more from the anticipation of the reward than the actual
behavior that gives the reward.
Did I remember that correctly?
There's a bazillion studies on dopamine, of course.
Also I should say, I think if you only talk about dopamine, it's not the full story about
habits.
There's many neurochemicals that are involved in the process, and dopamine is just one
part of the overall picture.
But it does play a very important role.
For a long time, we thought it was about reward and satisfaction and enjoyment.
But in fact, it seems that the crucial role dopamine plays is about prediction and anticipation.
And so the first time that you take a bite of a pancake, you don't know what to expect.
And so you take that bite, and then afterwards, you get a surge of dopamine, almost as if to like mark the experience or to teach you, hey, that
was favorable. You should do that again next time. Like if you happen to see it at pancake
again, that was a really great outcome. So then the next time around, you know what to
expect. And in fact, what we find is that dopamine tends to spike before you take a bite
not after. And there are a bunch of studies that show this gamblers get a spike before they roll the
dice, not after.
Drug addicts get a spike before they take a hit a cocaine, not after.
Dopamine, I think probably the more accurate way to describe it in this context is it's
a teaching molecule, it's a learning molecule, and it helps you mark experiences that are
favorable so that you'll remember them next time.
And then when you come across a similar situation, it spikes in anticipation.
So after you see the cue, you get this craving.
And it's actually that craving or anticipation or prediction that motivates you to act drives
the response and then there's an outcome.
Presumably, again, using your example, there are lots of diversity
between individuals, right? So you take 10 people who have never smoked a cigarette. Let's just
to make them at easy say, well, seven of them have no desire to. So they walk away. Three of them
are like, yeah, I'll give it a try to take a puff. One of them starts hacking and says, that is the
most disgusting thing I've ever done. I never want to do that again. And they never do. One of them
says, you know, I kind of like that.
I'm gonna do this socially.
Anytime I'm gonna have a drink, I'm gonna have a cigarette.
And one of them goes on to become a chain smoker.
Now, what explains that distinction?
How much of that is neurochemical?
There are examples like that for alcohol and drugs
and all kinds of things.
And I'm not an expert on addiction
and I didn't write the book about addiction
so I don't wanna speak out of turn
or step out of my lane or anything.
But I don't know that I have a good answer to it.
But from what I understand and from what I've seen as I was researching the book, it does
seem to have a strong, basically, genetic or neurochemical component.
It seems like, in a sense, drugs kind of hack the system.
This is, I think, one way to define an addiction, which is the
process of learning is actually broken. Attics know that the behavior does not benefit
their lives in a lot of ways, but they still can't get themselves to stop doing it, even
though they know it doesn't benefit them. And I think part of the reason that happens
or perhaps the primary reason is the drug kind of hacks the system. It gives you this spike
adopamine, even though you shouldn't be getting it.
Usually your brain would not be doing that.
It would not be trying to teach you to repeat that,
but you're artificially spiking it
by taking the substance
and so then process of learning breaks.
I also find it interesting that different people
will get that pleasure from different things.
When I'm not in a good place, when I'm unhappy about something,
it's never my tendency to have a drink. So alcohol would only be associated with something I want
to do when I feel good to begin with. I would never want to have a drink when I don't feel good.
But when I don't feel good, I would happily binge on junk food. That would be the thing that
provides comfort. And of course, there are people when they're unhappy, they would never want to eat even, let alone have junk food.
I find it interesting to at least contemplate how much of that is genetic, how much of that
is learned and what else is going on in sort of understanding that because that does sort
of factor into falling to the level of our habits because we fall to these levels when
things are not going well typically.
I do think there's a genetic component.
Some people are more sensitive to certain substances than others.
Or at least it appears to be so.
However, it does strike me as like very possible that a good chunk of it is learned and that
now you have a story that junk food is the way that I cope or the way that I soothe myself
when I need that.
And in a sense, your habits are these solutions to like recurring
problems that you face. So say you have somebody who comes home from work and they feel exhausted.
And one person, that's a recurring problem that they feel often. And so one person comes home and
they play video games for 30 minutes. And another person comes home and they go for a run. And a third
person smokes a cigarette. And all of them are solving
the same underlying recurring problem, but they're choosing different methods through which to do that.
And I wonder about how the grooves kind of get formed. Once we learn that a certain method is
effective in solving that problem, we tend to default to it, even if it's not the only way to solve
that, even if yeah, going for a run would make me feel better, but I'm just used to smoking cigarettes now.
Then we start to develop a story around it, it starts to become a little bit of our identity,
we start to use it as a crutch.
I do think there's definitely a learned component to that as well.
All right.
I interrupted you before you were just about to launch into the four laws.
Yeah, yeah.
Okay.
So the four stages are Q, craving, response, and reward. The Q is something
that you notice. So for example, you see a play to cookies on the counter. That's a visual Q.
It starts the habit of eating a cookie. The craving is the prediction or the meaning that you assign
to that queue. Often happens relatively automatically or quickly. So you see the play to cookies and you think,
oh, that'll be sweet sugary tasty enjoyable.
It's that favorable meaning that leads to that dopamine spike
that we talked about that motivates you
to take the third step, which is the response.
You walk over, you pick the cookie up, you take a bite.
And then finally, there's the reward.
Oh, it is in fact sweet, sugary, tasty, satisfying.
Now, not every behavior in life is rewarding. Sometimes things have a cost or a consequence.
Sometimes they're just kind of neutral and don't really mean a whole lot.
If a behavior is not rewarding, then it's unlikely to become a habit because you don't have any
reason to repeat it again in the future. You need some kind of positive emotional signal associated with the behavior for you to stick with it.
At least, as we've already talked about, an immediate signal that says, hey, that was enjoyable.
Is there some evidence to suggest if I remember back to like my Psych 101 class,
which is obviously pretty elementary, that some of the most addictive behaviors are variably reinforcing.
I sort of remember this example of why slot machines
are particularly addictive because the pattern
with which they produce a win is actually random
and therefore you really don't know when it's going to come.
You know it's going to come.
You have to have belief that you'll see other people win
and you've won in the past.
But that's somehow even more addictive. Whereas the cookie in theory is not variably reinforcing, it's
pretty much reinforcing the same way every time. I mean, presumably only subject to the
tastiness of the cookie.
It's even more. There have been tons of studies done on variable rewards. The basic answer
is yes, you're right. Variable rewards tend to accelerate or intensify behavior. It can
get even more twisted than that in the slot machines example because what they have found is
that the sweet spot tends to be right around 50.50. You can imagine getting a
reward at very different schedules like you could get it 95% of the time or you
could get it 5% of the time. Well, if you only get it 5% of the time, then you
learn pretty quickly like, hey, this isn't a very fruitful action. Maybe I should
stop doing this. But if you get it around 50. hey, this isn't a very fruitful action. Maybe I should stop doing this.
But if you get it around 50, 50, tends to work out for you a lot, but not every time.
And it still is coming at it like a roughly a random pattern, even if you know, over 10,000
trials, it works out to be about 50% of the time.
Man, you will just keep pressing that slot machine button over and over and over again.
There have been studies done on mice where they would get a squirt of sugar water when they
poke their nose in a box. And if they did it at a variable reward schedule, they would do it. I
can't remember the exact number. I want to say it was like 6,000 times in an hour, many, many times.
We laugh at it thinking about mice, but we're not that different. The average slot machine player
will press the button like 800 times in an hour. And so we're just basically doing the same thing. Getting the reward, but not knowing exactly when it's going to happen, it gets
you to do it more frequently. And you can think about examples like this in everyday life.
Imagine a remote control where the battery is dying and you press the power button, but
it doesn't turn on right away. And you're like, God, did that work? And then you press
it again a little harder, and then maybe you're pressing it on third time. Now, if you do
it eight or nine or 10 times,
you're like, okay, the batteries are dead.
But if on the second try, it turns on,
the variable reward got you to do it again,
or got you to try the behavior more.
So, that variable reward schedule
is definitely something I can intensify behavior.
You remember Anchorman?
Yeah.
I assume you've seen, yeah.
This might actually mean that there is truth
to the statement that 50% of the time it works every time.
Incredible reference.
Yes, fantastic.
Little did we know that Will Farrell was a cognitive psychology fan.
Well, I think that was Paul Rudd's line, wasn't it?
Was it?
Yeah, when he used black panther, the colline.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Amazing.
Yeah, 50% of the time it works every time.
I'm going to be honest with you, that smells like pure gasoline.
It's got bits of real pan through in it.
It's made by Odeon.
So those are the four stages.
What I like to do and what I consider to be the hallmark of my work, I'm just interpreting
the research like pretending to be an academic, I'm not actually an academic.
I think the value that I try to provide is to make these ideas actionable and to turn
them into something that we can operationalize or apply to daily life.
And the four laws of behavior change are how I have attempted to do that.
So if we understand that a habit has those four steps and how do we actually change our
behaviors, we can follow these four laws and there's one for each stage. The first law of behavior change is to make it obvious. You want the cues of your
good habits to be obvious, available, visible, easy to see. The easier it is to see or get your
attention, the easier it is to notice, the more likely you are to act on it. The second law is
to make it attractive. It's the more attractive or appealing or exciting a habit is.
The more likely you are to feel motivated to do it.
So again, this is about anticipating it or something you anticipate more.
Feel more motivated.
The third law is to make it easy.
The more easy, convenient, frictionless, simple a habit is.
The more likely the behavior is to be performed.
And then the fourth and final law is to make
it satisfying. The more satisfying or enjoyable, pleasurable a habit is, the more likely
you are to repeat it in the future. So those four laws give you like a high level overview
of how to build a good habit. So make it obvious, make it attractive, make it easy, make it
satisfying. You don't need all four every single time, but the more that you have those four things working for you,
I think the more likely it is that the good behavior will stick
or that you'll find a way to start on it.
If you wanna break a bad habit,
then you just invert those four.
So rather than making it obvious,
you wanna make the queue invisible.
Unsubscribe for me, males.
Reduce exposure to the queue.
If you're trying to be on a diet, don't follow food bloggers on Instagram. Reducing exposure to the thing that
starts the process. Rather than making it attractive, make it unattractive. Rather than making it easy,
make it difficult, so increase friction, put more steps between you and the behavior. And rather
than making it satisfying, make it unsatisfying. Layer on some kind of immediate consequence or cost to the behavior.
Those four, make it invisible, make it unattractive, make it difficult, make it unsatisfying,
give you a high level framework for how to break a bad habit.
Now, how often is a certain behavior, the combination of breaking a habit and creating
a habit?
Again, it seems like a lot of the ones we
default into talking about or the hard ones like nutrition. We all eat, we're all going to eat all the time.
It's not something you can opt out of or into. We all eat. So presumably if a person says,
again, I hate coming back to weight because it's such a stupid example relative to say overall health, but let's say health actually.
I want to be a much healthier person.
So I need to change the way I eat. That's two things, right? You have to start eating better and stop eating
poorer. It is two things, but I view them as two sides of the same coin. In many cases, you know,
we can come up with edge cases or examples where the behaviors start to get more specific. But
generally speaking, I think there are three ways to break a bad habit.
You can eliminate it entirely, so you can just go cold turkey, cut it out, and never do
it again.
You could curtail the behavior to the desired degree, so you can reduce it a little bit.
You still do it sometimes.
Instead of drinking a beer at dinner every night, you just have it maybe once a week.
You could also replace it.
So rather than drinking a beer, you replace it with water.
When I'm thinking about myself personally,
when I actually am changing behavior,
I don't usually think about breaking bad habits that often.
In fact, most of the time, I'm focused
on building or establishing new good behaviors,
which necessarily displays the old ones.
For example, with eating, it is a bit of a zero sum game.
I mean, not entirely.
I guess you could just keep eating more and more and more.
But generally, if you say I'm going to eat more good things,
it kind of drives down the bad things.
Is that the way it normally works, then?
I think a lot of the time it does.
And that's why I tend to focus on that for my personal life.
It's kind of like two plants. One plant, if it grows a little bit more and spreads its
leaves a little further, it starts to crowd out the other plant, just soaks up more energy and
resources in sunlight. And your good habits are kind of like that. I mean, we all, in some sense,
it is zero sum in the sense that we only have 24 hours in each day. And so if you have somebody
who says, even if they're unrelated habits, they say,
hey, I want to start doing something healthy.
I'd like to start working out for an hour each day.
And I also want to watch less TV.
I just feel like I watch Netflix too much.
Well, if you usually watch Netflix for three hours each evening,
and you decide to insert your workout from six to seven pm,
by definition, you're not watching Netflix while you're doing
that.
You start to crowd out the bad behavior just by focusing on building a workout habit, even
if you don't think about the TV thing at all.
So my sort of general approach is, look, I'm trying to spend my 24 hours in the highest
leverage way possible, the best way possible, the way that is moving me toward whatever
I'm optimizing for.
Let me just try to continually think about how to upgrade those behaviors.
I also like that mindset more than the breaking the bad habits one because it gives me a reason
to improve even once I have good habits.
I'm continually looking for the higher lever ejection, even if what I'm doing is already
good, okay, fine, how can I make it great now?
I tend to focus on that style rather than thinking about breaking bad ones, but they
definitely are related to answer your question.
The example that we come back to is smoking, because smoking doesn't really take that much
time.
So it's hard to say, I'm just going to introduce a new habit that will force smoking out.
Are there other examples, though, of habits where you really do focus on how to break the
bad one? Yeah. So to take the smoking example, I think it's helpful to divide it into the specific
instances in which it happens. So we kind of lump smoking into a single habit, but the
truth is it actually might be a collection of like a dozen habits throughout the day.
It might be that you have a habit of smoking when you get in your car for the morning commute. And then you also have a habit of smoking around 10-30 when you take a
break with your coworker. And then you also have a habit of smoking after dinner on your porch.
And all three of those are going to have their own Q craving response and reward. In a sense,
you kind of have to intervene in like 12 different places to try to come up with a solution for each one of those.
So you might find that like for the morning commute, maybe instead of having a cigarette,
you come up with something else that you can do on the morning commute that fulfills
that desire.
Maybe even just a cup of coffee is what wakes you up instead of a cigarette.
That may not work for the 1030 session with your friend.
Maybe there you actually need like an e-cigarette to start, want to have the socialization of feeling like you're
smoking with a friend. You may need to like take it in different stages and
break it down. Degree where it's easier to have a line of attack. The environment
seems to be so potent. You know, again, David Foster Wallace writes about his
commencement speech, this is water. He talks about the ubiquity of water and also the fact that you don't even realize it's
there.
And that's what makes it so profound, right?
He's referring to certain thoughts.
But I think the same is true of these cues.
For most of us, we're not actually that aware of what it is.
It can be pointed out to you and you can say, oh, yeah, I come to think of it.
I am a fish swimming in water.
Or yeah, I come to think of it every time I get in the car, it's the act of getting in
the car and driving to work that signals a change in where I'm going and that's what forces
me to light up.
But the example of having the cigarette at 1030 with your coworker is a very powerful
one because of the connection in the environment.
I remember in my residency,
when people would come into the hospital
with abscesses from IV drug use.
So very Baltimore, which is right in my residency,
there was just rampant IV drug use.
You'd be amazed at how much that habit
and that addiction could cause a person to do something
that at the surface doesn't seem that logical.
Use dirty needles and needles would break
in their abscesses and you'd be down there
and you'd be sort of draining a huge baseball size,
pus-filled abscess that's got broken needles in it.
And this person is very sick.
I mean, this is a person who's now risking their life
due to this.
And they would be back in a month with the same thing
in a month and a month later, the same thing over and over
and we're gonna tragically, eventually a lot
as people would die. But I remember at some point
saying to these folks, this was the best advice I could offer, which was not very helpful, was,
I don't think you can go back to the same place you live. I think you need new friends.
Now, that's not a very helpful thing to offer somebody who probably doesn't have many choices,
but the point was like, how could you expect this person to go back to the same place that they were living in the same environment with all of the
same people doing the same things and say, well, you just got to resist it.
I mean, it doesn't make sense. Presumably, someone who decides they want to stop drinking
alcohol really ought not go into a bar that much anymore.
Environment is like a form of gravity pulls on you and you can resist it
for a little bit, but maybe a day or a week or a month, but at some point it just starts
to drain on you, sucks you back in. And to your point about going back to the environment
that prompted the behavior in the first place, I mean, this is one of the stories I share
in atomic habits, but it was the surprise that we saw from the Vietnam War, which is
so many soldiers were getting addicted to heroin and drugs when they were over there. And then they came
back and we were like, what are we going to do with all these addicted soldiers? And it turns out
that 90% of them are more ended up being fine because they didn't go back to the place where they
got addicted. They went home to their friends and family and they didn't have all the same signals
that were prompting them to pick up the habit.
And so they were able to drop it much more easily than we thought they would.
And compare that to the typical drug addict who does the reverse.
They go into rehab and that's where they leave all of their cues and influences behind.
And then once they get clean and they detox, we send them back to the same place where
they got addicted before. That is much, much harder, uphill battle. So environment, I think it's kind of like
the invisible hand that drives our behavior. As you said, it's kind of like water, you know,
fish and water. We don't realize it. But we all have these things that we say are important to us.
Oh, I would like to lose weight or I like to build a business or I want to finish a book. But then you look around the spaces where we live and work. The cues of those
habits are not a big part of the environment. We all are busy, strapped for time, minimal
energy. We have kids to take care of or parents to do chores for or friends to see. And whenever
we have limited capacity or limited time or were low on energy
or exhausted, what choice do we make? We often choose the thing that is most obvious in the environment.
We choose the thing that is the easy choice or the path of least resistance. And so,
if I'm recommending a place to start for changing behavior, it's usually either the first law or
the third law. It's making it obvious and making it easy. Because we can
talk about making it easy, but scaling habits down obviously
makes it more likely that you're able to complete the task. And
making it obvious essentially creates an environment where the
good choices are right in front of you, where they're the path
of least resistance. Individually, I think it's easy to overlook
the importance of this because individually, one change to the environment does not usually meaningfully move the needle or change your behavior.
But collectively, making a dozen or two dozen or 50 and thriving in a space that is stacking the odds
in your favor.
That's making it more likely that you will just choose the good thing because the healthy
food is on the counter and the TV is behind a wall unit and a cabinet where you're less
likely to see it.
And the remote controller is inside a drawer and there's a book in its place and you have
a couple books that are scattered around in your desk waiting for you to pick them up
and open them.
You can do it with digital spaces too.
When I wanted to start reading more, I took Audible for audiobooks and I moved it to
the home screen on my phone and took all the other apps and moved them to the second screen.
That's a very small thing and it doesn't guarantee the behavior, but it's another way
to stack the odds in my favor that whenever I open up my phone, I'm reminded to listen
to an audiobook for a few minutes rather than browse Instagram.
And the more that you do those kind of things, the more likely good behaviors are to arise.
So, one thing I want to park for later once we get through the laws is a very specific
question around the challenges that some people face and that they don't control their environment.
And again, I come back to food because I think for most of my patients and for myself,
food is such a struggle because again, it's always around us.
You have to do it.
It's not a behavior you can just opt out of.
And I think those of us that have kids, not to throw our kids under the bus,
but I haven't met too many people who's eating habits get better once they have kids.
If they're generally inclined to be healthy people because at some point you start losing
the battle of how much non-crap you can have in the house due to time constraints and
the other constraints, which is, look, kids are going to eat things that are probably
not so bad for them, but I shouldn't be eating.
Wheatthins, my kids love wheatthins.
I love wheatthins. I think the
difference is they can get away with eating a lot more wheat thins than I can. So I've lost the
wheat thin battle. We have a pantry that is full of wheat thins and I'm never at least for the
foreseeable future going to get those wheat thins out of there. So now every time I walk in the pantry
I'm staring down the barrel of wheat thins and I would love to get those wheat thins in the trash But every time I do my wife says understandably hey if you want to be in charge of feeding the kids every meal
Knock yourself out chef
But if you're not let me handle food and our kids eat well
But they're gonna eat wheat thins and a few other things that you don't want to eat
Isn't it kind of fascinating like you're someone that I think most people were described as
Disciplined and high performing and talented and skilled and you like look at yourself with that and you're like weatheins beat me every time.
I think about myself. I was doing an interview with somebody else a couple weeks ago and he was joking about how the number of cookies he can eat is either zero or 30.
Because if they're there, then he's going to eat them all.
And I'm exactly that way. One of the best hacks that we've come up with is,
I love chocolate chip cookies, and my wife will make them,
but she'll make the balls of dough and then freeze them
and put them in the freezer.
And at night, after dinner, we'll take them out
and just take out two and put them on the pan
and warm up the oven and put them in.
And it's actually a better experience
because you get to eat like fresh baked warm chocolate chip cookies.
But you'll only eat two because all the rest of them are frozen.
It's just enough friction to know that this is gonna take another 15 minutes.
If I want to take two more out and heat them up,
I don't actually need another cookie.
Like I just want to deed it.
What limits you from putting five on the tray?
We just haven't gotten in the habit of doing that.
So hopefully that question won't wreck my psyche
and now we'll be doing that every night.
It's part about the accountability though,
between you that probably you say I want five,
at least she's gonna say.
She would be like, come on.
Yeah, for sure.
It's interesting the ways in which
there's a whole discussion we can have
about habits and marriage and relationships
and how that influences things,
because each person soaks up a little bit
of the other partner.
But we've seen it work in a very positive way for training,
which is they're gonna be some days
where I just don't feel like working out
after a full day at work.
But she's like, all right, we're gonna go to the gym.
And then I'm like, okay, I'll change.
And then other days, I'm like, okay, I'm ready.
And she's like, all right, you know,
and she didn't feel like it.
That's really helpful for the long-term consistency.
But I've talked to other couples who've said,
my nutrition habits actually got worse,
because like one day I won't feel like cooking.
I'll be like, hey, can we just order out
and she'll be like, okay, fine.
And then the other day, she won't feel like cooking.
I'm like, hey, why don't we pick up something from,
and you're like, okay, fine.
And so you can see how it goes in both directions.
And I don't have a good way to describe
these upward and downward spirals
that we often get into where the momentum once it's moving in that direction you just kind of like
it becomes your default behavior and you just sort of keep rolling with it. But there's something very
powerful about that in life that if you get on a nice trajectory and you got a good spiral working
for you then that momentum just kind of carries you. If you start to get in a downward spiral,
you really gotta find a way to just reverse course
and gain a foothold, even if it's a really small thing,
just to get the momentum moving in the other direction.
But anyway, there are a lot of potentials there.
And that's actually something I feel like I've also noticed
with my patients and myself, which is,
it seems that the people who are able to be more self forgiving when
they slip up and get back on course have an easier time than people who approach it
through a very perfectionistic lens.
And once they make a mistake, they get into the cycle of self-judgment and beating themselves up. And I say then, like,
it's me too, right? We all do this. And all of a sudden, a blown meal turns into, well,
forget it the days of, I mean, I've screwed this day up, so I'm just going to eat whatever
I want. And then you wake up the next day and you probably feel like crap both physically and emotionally and that reduces
your drive to continue to do what you set out to do and give this by else. And you make
a point about that in the book, which is if you're going to miss a workout, miss a workout,
but don't miss too.
Yeah, never miss twice is the idea that I try to, the little man try to try to tell myself.
Stuck to the diet for nine days, binge ate a pizza on the 10th day. Well, I wish I hadn't happened,
but never miss twice,
so let's make sure the next meal is a healthy one.
And I think we all know this implicitly
from going through life, but it's easy to forget in the moment,
which is, it's rarely the first mistake that ruins you.
It's like usually the spiral of repeated mistakes that follows,
that's the real problem. It's like letting,
slipping up, become a new habit, that's the real problem. It's like letting, slipping up, become a new habit.
That's the real issue.
If you can cut that off of the source, if you can never miss twice, get to the end of
the year, and those mistakes are just like a little blip on the radar.
It's really about getting back on track quickly.
I think actually you see this with top performers in many different industries.
Think about any athlete.
I mean, this is something that like Nick Sabin's teams
at Alabama pride themselves on.
The screw up a play or have a bad drive,
throw an interception for a touchdown or something,
but the focus is on the very next play.
And I'm making sure that you don't let that mistake
become another mistake.
And the teams and the athletes
that are really good at doing that,
at having a short memory and getting right back on track, they end up having really successful careers.
And you can scale that down to your own life.
Gretchen Ruhman actually has this, I thought it was a clever little idea, which is divide
the day into four quarters.
So you got like morning, afternoon, dinner, and night, evening and night.
If you make a mistake, keep it contained to that quarter.
So you don't lose the
day, you just lose the quarter, and then the next one you get back on track. If you can keep your
failure small like that, if you can contain the damage, then I just think it's easier to get back
on track quickly and to maintain the momentum, build consistency, all the other positive benefits
that we've talked about. And to your point about judging yourself or feeling guilty, you're turning this into like a some kind of self-burating session. Playing the victim never makes
it better. It doesn't make any of it easier. I think generally in life, we all have things that
happen to us. Some of them are terrible things. And you can be the victim, but I don't know that it
ever benefits you to play the victim, to accept that role. Bad things can happen to you,
but that doesn't mean you have to start to identify
as someone who is worthy of them
or someone who is, you know, it's inevitable
for that to be part of your story.
And so the more that you can like,
cut the judgment out of it,
cut the guilt out of it, the story, the narrative piece,
and take that away and just accept the event
for what it is and move on to the next
instance, I think probably the better off you'll be.
Yeah, this is probably an area where a habit that is probably desirable for many people
also becomes a tool to help, and that's mindfulness meditation, which I think is one of the more
powerful tools to help people observe the judgment without judging it, which sounds odd to
someone who hasn't practiced that,
but that becomes very powerful. Made a difference as I've kind of released the
need to be perfect. It's really a continuum, and there's a spectrum of efficacy here, which is
like on Monday, we traveled the whole day. We got back, and I really wanted to work out. I just
hate ever missing a workout. But the reality is once we got home
and the kids were exhausted and my wife was tired and it just felt like sort of a schmucky thing to do
to go and work out and leave her with decompensating kids and a whole bunch of stuff that needed to be
unpacked. Actually, part of the judgment was letting go of that, letting go of the fact that I wasn't
going to work out that day. And that was okay. Now Now you can do that on anything, I think, if you can come to be flexible and say, you're
stuck in the airport with your kids, the food sucks.
It is what it is today, and you're not horrible because of it.
But I think this idea of get back on the horse as quickly as possible is really powerful.
Again, anecdotally, I always bring everything back to driving a race car.
It is so rare that you make a mistake and crash in a car
because of what you did at that moment
and not because of what happened earlier.
If you spin at corner four,
the mistake usually started at corner two.
And sometimes you don't realize it.
And sometimes you do realize it,
but you arrogantly think that you don't have to make
any adjustment going forward because of it.
At least for me, that's been an incredibly humbling experience with how mistakes compound.
Rapid course correction is probably a deeply applicable lesson for many areas of life.
The world is complex and situations evolve. Life is dynamic, it's not static. Your preferences
also evolve. What you optimize for or want is different today than it was 10 years ago
and probably will be different five years from now or 10 years from now. And given that many changing dynamics,
it's not possible for someone to predict the optimal course of action. And even if you could,
it is very unlikely that it will remain the optimal course of action. Given that things are going to be changing,
you're going to be off course at some point and the ability to correct for that and to correct for that quickly.
I mean, it might be one of the all optimal life skills. The ability to
assess where you are in the moment, see what the next step is going to be, keep in mind where you ultimately want to go,
and then correct as needed is possibly the path to like living a great life.
I heard recently this, I thought was a great little framework, which is A, B, Z came
from Sean Puries, a entrepreneur.
And basically said, you need to know your A, B, Zs A is where you are right now.
It's like the truth of the situation, the reality.
B is your next step. And Z is where you are right now. It's like the truth of the situation, the reality. B is your next step and Z is where you want to go.
Ultimately, it's where you want to end up.
And I think the key, this is me talking now, not him.
For me, the key is working backwards.
It's knowing Z first, knowing what you're optimizing for
and then jumping back to A and being honest
about the situation.
What is the truth of the situation?
What are the resources I have, the skills I have?
What are my strengths?
What are my weaknesses?
What's reality say?
And then knowing that I want to head towards E
and knowing honestly where I am today, what's the next step?
I actually don't need to know C through Y right now.
I don't need to have the whole thing planned out perfectly,
but I do need to make sure that my next step
is directionally correct. If it is, then you can just keep running that ABC process over and over again until you finally
get there. Yeah, any Duke talks about this in a slightly different way, and she refers to it as
backcasting, and I find it to be an incredibly powerful tool, again, to be contrasted with forecasting.
Right. Forecasting is I'm just going to stand here, and I'm going to tell you I got to do B and then
C, and then the, the, as opposed to saying, no, this is where I am.
That's the desired outcome. Let's start working the steps backwards. What you've described is
slightly different, but I think it preserves this idea of taking stock of where you are and most
importantly, understanding where you need to be and not trying to do what I think stochastically
is really hard, but predict every step going forward. The only thing I'll add to that,
which I like Annie's framework,
and I think working backwards is,
it's a really powerful thing, particularly if
you can not be your own bottleneck in the process,
the phrase I like is work backwards from magic.
What would the magical outcome be?
What would the ideal outcome be?
And then let me work backwards from that.
And a lot of people have trouble
with that brainstorming part
of the process because they think, well,
if it's unrealistic, why would I even try?
And the point is like, listen, there's way too early for that.
Most people have become their own bottleneck long before reality
prevents them from doing it, which is kind of this great irony.
We're like, oh, you know, why would I attempt this like super
impossible thing?
And it's like, well, the world hasn't even told you it's impossible
yet. You have I think
Workbackwards from the magical outcome, but my key is I want to be very clear about where I'm going, but very flexible about how I get there. I don't need it to happen. If I work backwards, I don't need it to happen only through that chain of that potential path. Because if you can only have one way to get there, you're actually kind of brittle. You become hostage to things working exactly in that way. But if I know where I want to
get to, the very clear vision, I'm flexible on how I get there. Well, now I can start to
spring on opportunities as they arise and just take whatever the most fruitful path seems
to be. But I do think that that whole process starts with working backwards. So it's, I
think a more fruitful way to think about where you want to go than just trying to predict.
Before we leave the first law, what advice do you offer for people if they aren't quite
clear what the cues are? Again, in the spirit of trying to even displace a habit that's
maladaptive and create new ones. Again, is this something that's just empirical or
is it, I hate to use the word, but other tricks for identifying what the cues are?
I think there are exercises or strategies you can use. So you sort of hinted at this a few minutes ago, and I meant to say it, but I forgot, which is
the process of behavior change strategically changing your behavior. We need to make a separation here, a distinction between the types of behavior change. Because people change their behavior all the time.
We're always responding to the situation we're in or the circumstance of the conversation
we're having.
This is like one of the great myths about behavior change, which is behavior change is hard.
Actually, it's one of the easiest things that you do.
Your brain is designed to change your behavior to match the situation that you're in.
You're making adjustments all the time.
The question is, can you reliably change your behavior? Can you design your behavior in
a fashion that you want? And if you want to design it, if you want to be in control of
it more, I think it almost always starts with the process of self-awareness. And that's
kind of what this question is getting at. I don't even know what the cues are. I don't
even know what my habits are. So the two exercises I recommend, the first one I call the habit scorecard, and you just go through your day and you list out every
habit that you already do. Try to get as detailed as possible. So usually there's a big lump in the
beginning like, I wake up, I take a shower, I step on the scale, I brush my teeth, I go to the
bathroom, I get dressed, like there's all this stuff that you do to start your day. And then there's
things for breakfast and starting a work day and on and on and on.
And the more that you have that list, again, the goal is not to judge yourself.
It's almost like you're at the zoo looking at animals and you're one of the animals.
It's like, oh, how interesting that they would do that.
You're just trying to get a lay of the land and see how do I actually spend my time.
What habits am I actually doing if I'm being honest about it?
So that's just to understand what habits you have.
To figure out what the queue is, basically you're just asking like five questions,
who, what, when, where, why, you're essentially just trying to get a lay of what's going on.
So let's say that you're like, man, I eat a lot of candy bars, but I don't know why I do it,
I don't know what the queue is.
Well, each time that you find yourself eating a candy bar,
just pull up a note on your
phone or have an index card or a notebook or whatever, somewhere to record it, write
down, what time is it?
Where are you at right now?
What's the context with the environment?
Who are you around?
Are you near the do you eat these by the same kind of people?
What were you doing just before this?
Was it a break from writing emails or doing something else?
And the more that you start to answer those questions
about the context, the better you'll start to understand,
hey, maybe that was the cue.
And I bet if you do that exercise
for whatever the particular habit is that you're working on,
just do that for, you may not even need to do it for a week,
but if you do it for five days or seven days
or something, you're gonna start to develop a good sense
for what it is that's prompting the behavior.
Yeah, that's a great exercise.
Is there any concern that when a person does that, the Hawthorne effect kicks in and they
basically start deviating from the natural behavior because of the observation?
In other words, is the act of going through this exercise potentially making it harder
for them to transparently see what's happening?
Maybe.
I'm not going to say it's not a risk.
I'm sure it's a possible risk.
But I think what's more likely to happen is rather than not
being able to see what's going on, assuming you're
being honest with yourself, it can be hard to honestly
observe your own behavior.
You have a lot of biases and stories for why we do what we do.
So assuming you're doing that to the best degree possible,
I think you're probably still going to get a good idea
of what the queue is. What I think you're probably still going to get a good idea of what the Q is.
What I think is more likely to happen if there is some influence on your behavior is you may find yourself changing the behavior anyway just because you're tracking it.
And there are quite a few studies that show this like with nutrition, for example, there are some studies about food journaling.
People who just keep a food journal, they're not even trying to stick to a certain calorie level or a certain macro profile or anything.
They just are tracking what they're eating, tend to change their eating habits, need less, just because they're tracking it,
even if they don't have a specific program they're trying to follow. So the mere act of observing something or measuring something often changes the behavior associated with it.
You may find that to be the case here. You're like, well, I keep it right now when I have candy bars, so I'm like, maybe I'll skip
this one. I think that's probably the more likely outcome, but who knows, there could be other biases
as well. These devices here, these continuous glucose monitors, they are a remarkable tool for
both insight. When you first put them on, you're sort of learning, oh my god, like I didn't
realize eating that thing would have this response in my glucose. But once you sort of saturate the insight,
part of that equation can be three months,
six months depending on the complexity of your life,
it becomes forever a behavioral tool.
You don't want to eat a certain thing
if it's gonna raise your glucose
because you've at least bought into the thesis
that you don't wanna have your glucose skyrocket
the way it does when you eat M&Ms.
So it's interesting.
It becomes kind of an accountability partner.
And I find some of the most interesting and sticky devices do that.
The wearables that offer an insight that's not obvious, but as objective, tend to be the
things that we really like coming back to.
Whereas the ones that are kind of obvious, like how many steps you take, that's not very
sticky because we sort of have an intuitive sense for what that is. Like once
they've spent enough time walking 10,000 steps a day, they don't really need a device to tell
them that anymore. It becomes easier to do on their own. This is a side comment, but I have this
like theory about technology and innovation and that the technologies that most radically change
the world or change our behavior are all just kind of different forms of vision.
You have obvious examples like X-rays which you know allow you to see the broken bone or MRIs or whatever that allow you to see some tissue in a way that you couldn't see before.
And so that gives you information that then you can act on and make a diagnosis and you know make some kind of change.
But the glucose monitors like another example is just like now you can's just like, now you can see this bike. And because you can see it, you change your behavior. Even stuff like
the number of email subscribers to my website, because my email platform tracks that,
and I can see how many people are signing up each day, I make a change to the form and,
you know, conversion and so on. And I do think there's some deeper lesson there about behavior change
and about what drives human behavior, which is if you can visualize your progress in some
way, maybe it's a chart on a screen, maybe it's an actual printout, maybe it's something
that you actually see looking through lenses or something, but if you can actually visualize
it, then the behavior often falls soon. And that's why even simple strategies
like a habit tracker where you just put an X on each day
seems very rudimentary, very basic,
but it can still be meaningful
because it gives you a visualizing your progress.
So anyway, the glucose monitor is an interesting one.
Yeah, this idea of what gets measured, gets managed
is a great tool.
About six months ago, I started going to the water meter of our house
every Tuesday and recording it. And then I've got a little spreadsheet that says, okay, this is
how many gallons we've used this week. This is what it would project to for a monthly usage, et
cetera, et cetera. And you just can't believe how much our water usage has come down in six months
because in Texas water is not that expensive actually compared to California,
but just it became something I was obsessed with,
which is like, we're not gonna waste any water.
I just don't wanna waste any water.
It's not become a game for me.
It drives my family nuts, but it is a game.
Like we are going to have the lowest water bill ever
in Austin.
No one is gonna use less water than us.
I'm obsessed with that spreadsheet.
It's kind of like an adult
version of I spy walk in. You're like, I spy the red thing and then all the red stuff
in the room lights up. Right now, you're like, I spy water and everywhere I go, that's
what I see. And you find opportunities and you find ways to change it.
Oh, yeah, when I'm giving my kids a shower, like once I'm lathering them up, the water,
I got to turn the water off. And they're like, Daddy, why are you turning the water off? I'm like,
because we're just putting soap on right now.
You don't need the water.
It drives everybody nuts.
Okay, so let's talk about the second law.
Yeah, so the second law is making it attractive.
And I think there's a simple example I could give here,
which is let's imagine that you wake up tomorrow
and you're like, all right, I listened to this guy talk
about habits all day today.
So tomorrow's gonna be the day. I'm gonna wake up and I'm gonna go all day today. So tomorrow's going to be the day.
I'm going to wake up and I'm going to go for a run.
So you set your alarm for 6 a.m.
And six a.m.
rolls around, but your bed is warm and it's cold outside.
And you're like, well, I'll just press news and sleep in like maybe I'll do it tomorrow.
But if you rewind the clock and come back to today and you text a friend and you say,
Hey, you want to meet at the park at 615 and go for a run. Well, now 6am rolls around. Your bed is still warm
and still cold outside, but if you don't get up and go for a run, you're jerk because you'll
leave your friend at the park all alone. And so you've kind of simultaneously made it more
attractive to get up and go for a run and less attractive to press news and sleep in.
Now you haven't made the run itself any easier.
That's still going to be as difficult as it was before.
So the habit, the difficulty is kind of the same, but you have changed the calculus that's
going on in your mind about like whether you should do this or not or how attractive it
seems.
So there are a bunch of examples, strategies like that and stuff I talk about in the book
and that you could use to kind of make habits seem more attractive than they otherwise are.
But that's sort of what it comes down to on a short term basis for making
habits attractive.
On a long term basis, I think it's about what we've already discussed about the
social environment and being part of a tribe where your desired behavior is the
normal behavior because those behaviors become very attractive even a year or
two or five from now, if they
help signal that you're part of the tribe.
Yeah, you brought up CrossFit earlier, but I always thought that CrossFit was one of the
best examples of this.
I never did CrossFit myself.
There's lots of criticisms of it, etc.
But the reality of it is, it was certainly, it wasn't, it is something that really creates
a community of people who have a certain belief about who they are
and what they do. For all the people who not crossfit, I've seen it take a lot of very
inactive people and turn them into some pretty impressive people.
Yeah, I think the social side, the community side of it is the strongest piece of the whole thing.
It's the part that's hardest for any other exercise program to replicate, that's for sure.
It does, it gets people to stick to it. I mean, it becomes, it sounds extremely
called a form of a religion,
but it becomes kind of like that for them.
I mean, the box is like their church in a lot of ways.
You know, they go six days a week
instead of one day a week.
There are a lot of strong community elements there.
You also see crossers pick up a bunch of habits
they didn't even expect,
like they thought they were going to start working out,
but then six months later,
they all are buying the same brand of knee sleeves and they have a certain type of weightlifting
shoe and they're all eating paleo and it was like, we didn't even plan on doing that stuff.
I just was going to go to a gym to work out. But all of those are behaviors that signal
what it means to be part of that group. And again, once you start to build friends in
that group and start to, you know, become ingrained in that society here in that tribe, you start to soak up some of those other behaviors
as well.
It's really a great example. I guess we'll go to the third and fourth law, but I want
to take a step back and ask you where you put nudging into this. So Richard Failer's book,
Nudge, which is probably the first book I ever read on this subject matter. I mean, it
seems so obvious, which is what makes it so interesting and insightful.
Sometimes the most brilliant things in retrospect
seem so entirely obvious.
But it was, I think, reading Richard's book, Circa,
I don't know, call it maybe 2012,
it's probably nearly 10 years ago.
This idea of the default food environment sort of came to me
and I use that term with our patients
as the more you can control your default food environment the more healthy you can be.
So if your default food environment sucks, you're going to be relying on willpower a lot and that's really, really hard.
If your default food environment is one extreme end of the spectrum, you kind of a perfect default food environment.
You can be the healthiest person in the world, even if it's not enjoyable.
If you were locked in a room and all you had were the best foods to eat, you're going
to end up being healthy and you're going to be kind of like, oh, I eat one more macadamia
nut and have one more avocado and salad.
But nudging obviously refers to a cue, but it also refers to this environmental change.
It doesn't seem to really capture the idea of making it attractive or does it?
I think it's more about making it obvious.
I would lump it more in the first law, design the environment to make the good habit, the
obvious one, to make the good habit the path of least resistance.
Some other nudges that are very popular, people talk about, is like default choices on forms,
the very famous example being the Oregon donor study.
Default opting in every employee to a 401k and making
them opt out is a nudge.
I think that's also another example of making obvious or we could also say making it easy.
Nothing's easier than letting it ride.
All of those are examples to your point about default food environment, Daria Rose who
writes a nutrition blog.
She's got a great concept.
I just like it.
It's kind of sticky home court habits and away court habits. The argument is like try to optimize your
home court habits first. What's the environment where it's your kitchen, it's
your apartment, you get to set the tone. And let's just try to prime all of that.
Whatever happens at a restaurant or when you're at a hotel traveling or whatever,
let's don't worry about that as much right now. Let's just optimize the home court.
I like that. If you can build a home court advantage for yourself,
then you get in a good situation.
You start to build some momentum.
You handle the thing that you're probably
going to be doing 70% of the time or 80% of the time.
And then after that, you can move on to the way court stuff.
So one of the other things you talk about
is the idea of accountability.
It's come up now several times.
And I think
everybody would agree that the moment you have somebody else in this thing with you, the
better it gets. Is there any evidence about the type of accountability partner? So an
example you gave was your wife, great accountability partner for you guys to work out. Would that
be more or less effective than if you were matched with a person who you didn't know,
but who had similar aspirations, where you'd be less comfortable and perhaps more inclined to hold
yourself to a higher standard? Again, it kind of comes back to this idea of how we're wired to be
seeking the approval of others and all those sorts of other things. Is there any research to support this idea?
I don't know of any studies that like distinguish clearly between those two.
It's quite possible they're plenty out there. I just may not know of them.
But I can see it working well on both sides and I also see complexities on both sides.
So a lot of the time when people talk about accountability partners,
they join a Facebook group or they join a course or a program or something and they get matched up the way that you described.
But I can actually see that form of accountability kind of falling apart fairly quickly for
a simple reason, which is it's a stranger and you don't really bear much cost for them
thinking you did a bad job or you may not really value or care that much about their opinion. Compare
that to the example I gave earlier, which is you walk outside in your neighbor's seas that your
lawn is very sloppy and you haven't mowed the grass in three weeks. That actually you may care
pretty deeply about because you don't want to be judged by the other people in the neighborhood
and you don't want to have friction with your neighbor and so on. And so there's much more of a cost there, and that form of accountability is a lot stronger because there's some reason why you really want
to fall through on it. Now, you could say that that same thing is true for, you know, for example,
a marriage or relationship. I don't want to let my partner down. I know what them to think poorly
of me and so on. But you have to remember in that particular case, you're so close that
there are actually a lot of additional complexities there. Like you want to be fairly forgiving
of your partner because you're living with them all the time, or even if it's not someone
you're married to, say it's your brother or your parents or whoever, there's just a lot
going on in those relationships. And so is the other person really going to become like
an enemy just over you skipping your workout routine on Tuesday? Because you guys got
to get dinner together on Wednesday night. And you have to babysit their kids over the weekend.
And there's a lot of other stuff that's involved there. And so in those cases, I think the
relationships are so tight or so complex that that person may not actually
want to be a strict accountability partner because of the other costs that may need to
bear.
You're kind of in this weird situation where you don't want there to be other things on
the line that would influence their ability to hold you accountable, but you do actually
want to care about their opinion and to bear some cost if you don't follow through.
Perhaps this is the reason why having like a coach is a good example because that's
somebody that presumably you want to do a good job because you're going to see them repeatedly.
Even if it's not as dicey as the neighbor situation where like you do bear some social
cost for it, you probably bear a financial cost because you may be paying your nutrition codes $500 or $1,000 or whatever.
And the more that there's some kind of painful cost associated with it, probably the more
that you're going to be willing to fall through on that accountability.
And speaking of a coach, just more broadly, how does a coach or how do the best coaches,
if you have insight into this, thread the needle of
creating accountability, but also creating encouragement when you fall short. Boy, that's a big question.
I'm not a coach. I've been fortunate to have some good ones and I've also had a bunch of
mediocre ones too. And thinking about the difference between them, we could have a whole conversation
about coaching and about the art of that because there is a really fine balance there. And I think there also is a big difference in the,
I'm going to use athlete, but of course, you can have a coach for many things, but there's a big
difference also in the intensity that the athlete might have. You can imagine I was into Olympic
weightlifting for a time, and it was kind of the main way I was training. I had the fortune of training with a really great team.
I was very average, but Holly Mangold was on that team and she competed at the Olympic
Games in London in 2012.
Just watching the interactions between the coaches and her and what was required for her
to make it to the Olympics was interesting to see.
There is every element of a tight relationship there.
I mean, there's tough love and there's actual love and there are some days where you have to be really harsh and some days
You have to be really soft and there's all the dynamics of the athletes internal mindset
There are days when you go out and you feel like you're a world killer and like nobody can touch you
And then there are other days where you just feel completely broken and you're like, can I keep this training up for another six months?
The more intense the objective is that you're trying to achieve, I think the more detailed
and balanced and nuanced all of that becomes.
And then you have just your standard CrossFit coaches coaching a 35 year old dad of two
who just wants to get in better shape.
And that I think may be totally different relationship.
I don't know that I have a good answer
there, but I do think it's a really important thing. Great coaches are incredibly valuable. They're
rare by definition. That's why they're great. It's probably much more complicated than a lot of
us realize. So you said rule number one and rule number three were probably the most important.
Rule number three is now make it easy. Yeah. So if I could only recommend one thing, if you forced me to say, Hey, where's the
one place I would start? I would say start with this. Start with me.
Did you hate being asked that question, by the way? If you would just do one thing.
You know how it is, you know, like if somebody said, What was the one thing I would do to
get healthy? You'd be like, Okay, come on. This is like a very big picture. There's a lot
of stuff here. Same story here. I do think this is a good place to start, though. And so
if I had to pick, I would say follow the two minute rule, which says, take whatever habit you're trying
to build and scale it down to someone takes two minutes or less to do. So read 30 books
a year becomes read one page or do yoga four days a week becomes take out my yoga mat.
And sometimes people hate that because they're like, okay, buddy, I know I'm not actually
just trying to take my yoga mat out.
I know I'm actually trying to do the workout.
So if this is some kind of mental trick
and I know it's a trick, then like,
why would I fall for it basically?
And I get where people are coming from,
but I have this reader, his name's Mitch,
and I mention him in atomic habits.
He lost a ton of weight.
Another guy I think he lost definitely over 80 pounds.
I think it was probably over 100.
Kept it off for a long time.
He had this interesting rule for himself though. When he went to the gym for the first six weeks, he lost definitely over 80 pounds, I think it was probably over 100, kept it off for a long time.
He had this interesting rule for himself though.
When he went to the gym for the first six weeks, they started working out.
He wasn't allowed to stay for longer than five minutes.
So he'd get in the car, drive to the gym, get out, do half an exercise, get back in the
car, drive home.
And it sounds ridiculous.
It sounds silly.
You're like, obviously, this is not going to get the guy the result that he wants. But if you take a step back, what you realize
is that he was mastering the art of showing up.
He was becoming the type of person
that went to the gym four days a week,
even if it was only for five minutes.
And I think this is like a deep truth about habits,
something that we often overlook,
which is a habit must be established
before it can be improved.
It has to become the standard in your life before you can optimize and scale it up into something more. If you want, you can come up with a better theory like you could come
up with a perfect plan, but unless you're acting on it, it doesn't do you any good.
It's just a really good idea. For whatever reason, we get like really all or nothing about
our habits. We tend to have this tendency
to be like, well, if I can't do the full marathon training program, then why go for a run
at all?
Or if I can't follow through it while in the perfect lean startup business framework, then
like, why bother starting a company?
The two-minute rule kind of helps you get over that tendency of perfectionism and just
start to master the art of showing up, find a small way to establish the habit, make
a part of your new normal, and then you can gain a little foothold and start to scale up and expand from
there. There's that great quote from Ed Latimore where he says the heaviest way to the gym
is the front door. That's true for a lot of things in life. The hardest part is getting
started. So let's master that and make it part of your lifestyle. And then once you're
the kind of person who's showing up consistently, we have all kinds of options for how we can improve and optimize and so on. I think meditation is another great place
where that two minute rule really helps. I think it can be really daunting the first time you decide.
For the first time, let's say you buy the idea that, hey, you know what, there's probably real value
in this. I'd be better served to go on a silent retreat for seven days or meditate 40 minutes every day.
It's like, that's a real big step for someone who's never done it.
How about two minutes every single day you meditate and maybe in a few weeks it's three minutes a day.
But yeah, you have to sort of lay down that track to say,
Hey, I'm a person who meditates and be this is the actual muscle memory of what it looks like to sit down.
It's also surprising how few people actually have two minutes in their day where they stop
and do nothing except breathe.
That alone would deliver more value than you might expect.
And there are a whole host of other behaviors that go along with this.
You think meditating for two minutes sounds very small, but if you start to back out of it,
you realize you got to pick a space.
Where is it going to happen?
What time of day is it going to occur?
Is this something that you're going to do before work or after work?
Do you do it on your lunch break?
Try to do it with somebody to, so you have a little bit of social accountability, or
is this just like a private thing that you're going to do in the corner?
Do you need a pillow to sit on, or you find a sit on the floor?
Like what's your flexibility like?
Are you going to get interrupted by your kids?
If you do this at 7 a.m., it might be nice to get it done in the morning, but is that when you're getting them ready for school
and getting them dressed? A lot of little questions like that that people don't think about, and so
finding a very small version of the habit allows you to get all of that other stuff kind of handled,
figure out the logistics of it, and just to do it for a minute or two. And then once you get all that stuff handled
and you don't have to decide anymore, you have a little bit more mental capacity and energy
to actually focus into, okay, let me scale this up a bit and do it maybe in the way that I was
hoping I would. So how do you make them satisfying? Because that's the fourth bot.
Yeah, so this is the final piece. It's really about just making a habit that's pleasurable enough
that you want to return to it, giving you some reason, some emotional signal that, hey, this is worth it.
And there are a bunch of different ways you can do this.
Some of them are short term, some of them are long term.
The short term stuff is mostly about reinforcement.
So, classic examples are things like, oh, you can reward yourself with a bubble bath or
with ice cream or buying something that you wanted or whatever.
I think the key with those short-term reinforcements
is you wanna make sure that the reinforcement also aligns
with the long-term identity that you're trying to build.
Right, ice cream wouldn't be a great reward
for getting in better shape.
You go to the gym and you do a workout
and then you eat a bowl of ice cream.
It's like, okay, you're casting boats
for two different identities.
Or let's say that you're trying to get your finances in order.
And so you're like, okay, I want to budget consistently and save money for retirement.
Well, if you reward yourself with that, buying a leather jacket,
then it's kind of like, okay, on the one hand, you're trying to be a saver,
on the other hand, you're being a spender.
So, I like to pick things that we feel like are aligned.
So like in the fitness example, you could say, well, if I don't miss any workouts this
week, then I'm going to reward myself with a bubble bath in kind of like an hour alone
of peace and quiet on the weekend.
And that's like a vote for taking care of your body.
That seems pretty aligned.
Or if I save consistently for retirement this month, and I make a contribution each week,
then at the end of the month, I'm going to reward myself with a hike in the woods.
And that's like another example of a lifestyle of freedom and of controlling your time.
So anything that's aligned or reinforces that story you're trying to build, I think
that can make a great immediate reinforcement.
In the long run, the way to feel rewarded, the kind of ideal form of making it satisfying
is when the behavior starts to feel like it reinforces
your desired identity.
So if you're the kind of person who feels like,
yeah, I'm the type of person who doesn't miss workouts,
then in the middle of doing a set of squats,
you can feel satisfied because you're being
the kind of person you wanna be.
And so this comes back to the point
you made a little bit ago about,
I just don't wanna miss a workout.
Like I kind of feel off. I feel like I'm not being myself if I miss.
And so just getting the reps in, that alone is satisfying in the moment.
And that's sort of the ultimate version of making it satisfying because you don't even
need to wait for the reward.
It's just happening as you're in the middle of performing the behavior.
Make it obvious, make it attractive, make it easy, make it satisfying.
Those four laws and the various ways to intervene and do that increase the odds that you're going to fall through on a good habit.
Let's take a step back from all of this. When someone picks up your book, presumably there's a selection bias that exists,
which is this is a person who either through luck or through some recommendation or friend or whatever Has made a decision that they at least want to examine the habits in their lives and are potentially changed them
What do we know or what can we extract from this about a scenario that's different which is
Use my example you have a patient who you're trying to help and
Helping that patient requires some intervention. They're going to have to make a change.
Now, that change can be at one level really simple. I think the simplest change medicine has to offer
is take a pill. There's a time and a place for pills. I think it's a bit silly when people assume
that everything modern medicine has to offer is bad. Pills are bad. Obviously, that's not the case.
Taking your medicine for your blood pressure, your cholesterol, these things. If it's warranted,
that's a really important thing to do.
And we also know, by the way, that even something
as quote unquote simple as taking your medicine
is actually really hard for a lot of people.
Most people are, I think studies demonstrate,
you know, sort of in the neighborhood
is 60 to 70% compliant with something as simple as take a pill.
But it only gets harder from there.
Getting someone who's not sleeping well to sleep well.
That's a real big set of behavior changes. Getting someone who's not sleeping well to sleep well. That's a real big set of behavior changes.
Getting someone who's not eating well to eat well. Getting someone who's not exercising to exercise.
Getting someone who's not taking care of their mental health to take care of their mental health.
All of these things require enormous change.
If a person says on the surface, yes, I want to be better.
I accept that I want this outcome of being healthier, but they haven't
specifically had the need or desire to change the way they eat or exercise or
sleep or whatever. It adds a layer of challenge or friction to this process. What
advice would you offer to me in a situation like that for trying to implement
your insights into that
scenario to a person who hasn't fully selected into wanting to change habits.
The point about people self-selecting by picking up the book is interesting.
Sometimes it's like you're sort of only helping the people who already want to
be helped in that sense. It's interesting to think that most of the time the
people who most need to read
the book are not the people who pick it up to read it. The people who read about habits are usually
the ones who have fairly decent habits and you're pretty interested in it. The people who needed
the most, they've never read a book on habits and they don't want to read it, they're not interested.
Something interesting about that. But I think the points you bring up are very true and challenging,
changing your own behavior is hard enough.
Changing other people's behavior is like a whole other level of difficulty, a whole other
order of magnitude of difficulty.
I'll offer maybe three ideas that could apply.
The first one, and we've already talked about this in various ways, but I do think you
have to make it really small.
So you said taking a pill is the smallest version, but it doesn't always have to be that.
It could be, you know, if you're trying to get them to exercise, it could literally be doing one push-up,
walking around the block one time or something. And this is that version of, like, can I just go to
the gym for five minutes sort of thing. Let's just scale it down, make it super simple.
Along with that is very hard for it to be simple if people are being pulled in multiple directions.
And so I think if you're giving people a plan that has five things on there for them to do, can we eliminate
four of those for now? Stay at phase two and can we just do one right now? Let's take one thing
and scale it down and stay focused and just try to get a little bit of momentum going on that.
And then once we have established that, started to gain a foothold there and get a little bit more consistency with that one thing,
we can take that momentum and transfer it into the next one.
So yeah, ideally, probably a lot of patients
will be doing these five things or these 15 things,
but it doesn't mean you need to do all of them right now.
Let's pick one and stay focused.
So that's the first thing,
is try to keep it as simple as possible.
Pretty obvious answer, but I still think a useful one.
The second thing, again, fairly obvious, and we've talked about it a bit, but still I think
useful, is the environment design piece.
Even the laziest person, even the person who has zero interest naturally in these topics,
is a product of the environment that they're in.
Imagine this lab experiment where you're locked in a room that only has healthy food options. Even the laziest person is going to eat healthy there, they have no
other choice. And that doesn't mean that they need to change everything in their home so that it's
that control lab experiment feel. But look, there's a lot of low hanging fruit that can be done here
that you don't actually need someone. And this I think is one of the reasons why I like environment changes.
You don't actually need someone to be motivated every day to do this.
You really just need them to be motivated for like one afternoon, so that they change the environment a bit,
and that can actually serve them, in some cases, a concern for months,
but in most cases, even food-related cases, it could serve them for the next three days, or five days, or seven days. Just by getting junk food out of the house, that serves them for the
next couple days. You only need little pockets of motivation, and if you can direct that pocket
of motivation toward a high leverage action, like redesigning the environment, then it can continue
to serve even a lazy person for a good chunk of time. So that's probably the second thing.
So make it small, optimize the environment, and then the third thing, and this is maybe
more of like a coaching thing as someone who deals with patients or has clients or whatever.
The general strategy is easy to say but very hard to follow, which is praise the good,
ignore the bad.
It goes against the grain of what we want to do because they're like, you're telling me I just want to ignore the mistakes that they're making.
And certainly there's a place for rectifying mistakes and I don't mean that every problem should
just go unresolved. But especially early on, the thing that you really want to build is momentum.
And you want to reinforce the good behaviors. And as we talked about a good plant crowding out another,
a way to encourage that is by praising the good and ignoring the bad.
There was a hilarious op-ed that was written, I think it was in the New York Times,
this wife who her husband would never throw his dirty clothes in the laundry hamper,
and it was driving her nuts.
Occasionally he would do it, but it was like pulling teeth all the time to get him to do this consistently.
She tried nagging him, she tried annoying, you know, whatever. Just all kinds of different put the laundry hamper in a different place.
I don't even have it in the closet. Just have it out in the floor in the bedroom
and he still wouldn't do it. Sometimes he'd throw the clothes next to the hamper.
She's like, you're already throwing it over there. Just put it in.
Eventually, what she settled on doing was that every time that he happened to put it in the hamper,
she would make a huge deal about it. She'd run over, give him a kiss, give him a hug, say thank you, be like, oh, you're making my life so
much easier. Thank you so much. Over the course of about a year, she effectively trained him
to always put the clothes in the hamper because every time that happened, something good happened. He
got praised. It felt good. Almost like training a dog in a sense, which is all kinds of organisms, dogs
and humans love feeling praised. We like feeling good. We like being rewarded. And so if
you praise the good actions and ignore the bad actions, it's again, almost like a form
of gravity. People naturally gravitate toward the things that they get rewarded for, the
things they get praised for. And you'd be surprised how often people don't do something like this,
or in fact, do the opposite.
You can imagine the quiet kid in the household
who comes down for dinner with the rest of the family.
And it's like, oh, look who showed up.
They decide to share something about their day.
And it's like, oh, a fact about your life.
And you can imagine a parent or somebody saying something sarcastic like that.
And all of a sudden you're punishing
the very behavior that you wanted to see.
So praise the good, ignore the bad.
I think it applies in a lot of situations
and can be more powerful than you realized.
The tricky part is it requires a lot of patience.
You got to do it for six months or a year or three years.
It's hard to stick with that in the long run.
Last example of this is a weightlifting one.
I was at the gym on a Friday night one time,
and I was there with a friend.
We were doing a quick workout.
It's probably like 20, 25 minutes.
We got done, and we were putting our shoes on,
and this guy who's just kind of a jerk,
went over, was talking to him,
was like, quick workout for a Friday night.
She just kind of moved on,
but that's like exactly the opposite of the type of
feedback you want to be getting, especially if you're someone who's like new coming into the gym or
feeling kind of uncomfortable there. What people should be saying is, oh, it's great that you got
in here even though it's the weekend. And a little cutting comment like that is all that people need
to not show up again the next day. The more that you can be lavish with praise is maybe
stating it even too strongly, but it doesn't really cost you very much to be kind.
And you may not even remember it, but it's the kind of thing that might be
enough to get that person to show up again the next time. So in the long run,
praise and good and ignoring the bad can count for a lot.
So James, you're working on another book, right? I am. Yeah. And working is the
correct term.
Currently kind of slogging and battling
against the manuscript.
I seem to find whatever way requires the most suffering
to write books.
Atomic Habits, the first draft was like 720 pages,
and then I cut it down to 250 eventually,
which for the finished version.
This manuscript's like 600 and something right now,
so I'm in the trimming phase.
What's this book about? It's a book about strategy and choices and decision making and
how we direct our attention. I'm still kind of finding it and discovering it in a lot
of ways, but one question that you could have after finishing atomic habits is, okay,
that's great. I know how to build better habits, but which habits should I be focusing
on?
What's the high leverage action?
How do I figure out where to direct my energy and attention?
And so those are a lot of the questions that I'm exploring now.
Well, I can't wait to have you back to discuss that after I read it twice, which I will
do, I'm sure.
Thanks very much, James.
This has been great to sit down with you.
This is almost like reading the book a third time, and I picked up a lot of things that
I hope readers or listeners have also, and I look forward to implementing it both
personally and professionally. That's great. Thanks Peter. I appreciate the opportunity.
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