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Atomic Habits: An Easy & Proven Way to Build Good Habits & Break Bad Ones
Atomic Habits: An Easy & Proven Way to Build Good Habits & Break Bad Ones
Atomic Habits: An Easy & Proven Way to Build Good Habits & Break Bad Ones
Ebook380 pages5 hours

Atomic Habits: An Easy & Proven Way to Build Good Habits & Break Bad Ones

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

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About this ebook

The #1 New York Times bestseller.
Over 20 million copies sold!
Translated into 60+ languages!

Tiny Changes, Remarkable Results


No matter your goals, Atomic Habits offers a proven framework for improving--every day. James Clear, one of the world's leading experts on habit formation, reveals practical strategies that will teach you exactly how to form good habits, break bad ones, and master the tiny behaviors that lead to remarkable results.

If you're having trouble changing your habits, the problem isn't you. The problem is your system. Bad habits repeat themselves again and again not because you don't want to change, but because you have the wrong system for change. You do not rise to the level of your goals. You fall to the level of your systems. Here, you'll get a proven system that can take you to new heights.

Clear is known for his ability to distill complex topics into simple behaviors that can be easily applied to daily life and work. Here, he draws on the most proven ideas from biology, psychology, and neuroscience to create an easy-to-understand guide for making good habits inevitable and bad habits impossible. Along the way, readers will be inspired and entertained with true stories from Olympic gold medalists, award-winning artists, business leaders, life-saving physicians, and star comedians who have used the science of small habits to master their craft and vault to the top of their field.

Learn how to:
  • make time for new habits (even when life gets crazy);
  • overcome a lack of motivation and willpower;
  • design your environment to make success easier;
  • get back on track when you fall off course;
...and much more.

Atomic Habits will reshape the way you think about progress and success, and give you the tools and strategies you need to transform your habits--whether you are a team looking to win a championship, an organization hoping to redefine an industry, or simply an individual who wishes to quit smoking, lose weight, reduce stress, or achieve any other goal.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateOct 16, 2018
ISBN9780735211308
Author

James Clear

James Clear es especialista en formación de hábitos de larga duración. Su web, JamesClear.com, recibe dos millones de visitas mensuales, y su curso online Habits Academy es seguido por miles de estudiantes. Es conferenciante en universidades de todo el mundo, orador habitual de Fortune 500 y consultor de la NFL, NBA y MLB. Colabora regularmente en medios como Time, Entrepreneur, Business Insider y Lifehacker.

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Reviews for Atomic Habits

Rating: 4.10776232913242 out of 5 stars
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  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Maybe This Can Help You
    Download Full Ebook Very Detail Here :
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    - You Can See Full Book/ebook Offline Any Time
    - You Can Read All Important Knowledge Here
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    I feel like this is just a rewrite of the Habit Loop, honestly. Nothing new here, but if you need to read books about habits as a habit, maybe this is for you?
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    The author makes several good points, but if I can be real with you, these are all things that I have been talking up for nearly 20 years long before I read this. This whole thing further is mostly fluff and I could have written this in half the words for sure, maybe less.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Since coming out six years ago, Atomic Habits has remained on several best seller lists, and for good reason. It’s a self-help book, yes, but it isn’t like so many self-help books that pontificate about things most people can’t control. James Clear’s observations and advice are based on solid social science and past experience. My most gratifying take away after listening to the audio version is that much of what I do already is right. More and more I kept saying to myself, “Hey, that’s exactly what I do!” I’m anxious to peruse the appendix of the book since throughout “Atomic Habits,” Clear, who is the narrator, pointed out that copies of various templates for tracking habits are available at AtomicHabits.com. I listened to the audio version of Clear’s book, and he narrated in a very effective way. I’m glad I took the time to listen to James Clear’s book, and I think there is something for just about everyone in it.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Series Info/Source: This is a stand alone book. I borrowed this on ebook from my library.

    Thoughts: I liked this and it does a great job of laying out a plan for developing good habits and getting rid of bad habits. Things are laid out step by step and very simply. I like that each chapter starts out with a historical anecdote about a historical figure and their habits. This made the book very fun and easy to read.

    I was surprised at how readable this was. I speed right through it. It was entertaining and insightful. Nothing in here is rocket science and there are no huge revelations. However, there is some food for thought, especially around adapting your environment to support your habits. I realized I do a lot of that already without even realizing it. Just little things like laying out an outfit the night before so I can get going early in the morning without feeling stressed. Or laying my journal on my pillow in the morning so I don't forget to write in it before I go to bed.

    I think the most intriguing part of this book to me was the portion about mind set. How you need to say "I am a person who..." rather than "I would like to be a person who..." I never really thought about how that would change your mindset, so that was interesting to me.

    I also liked the idea of laying out your day as a list of habits. It lets you see what you actually do in a day and analyze that in a more objective way to see which parts of your day are sabotaging habits you want to develop and which parts are enhancing habits.

    There is a lot of focus on organizing your surroundings, friends, and lifestyle around habits you want to enforce. All of this makes a lot of sense and, in general, this is just good common sense to follow. I think the points made about how developing habits takes time and you need to forgive yourself if you lapse are also important ones.

    I think the hard part for most people is actually putting some of these skills into action and not just forgetting about this book as they move forward in life. Sticking with something consistently and long-term is always hard. It's especially hard with something like eating or exercise where you don't get the immediate gratification of instant success. This is discussed in this book as well.

    My Summary (5/5): Overall, while there is nothing really new or earth-shattering here, this does lay out an easy to follow process for developing good habits in simple steps. There are some intriguing suggestions to help you analyze your surrounds and life to pinpoint why you continue with bad habits and have trouble developing good ones. I found this to be an easy and entertaining read and I think everyone would benefit from reading this because it does really make you sit down and think about your life and how you could improve aspects of it. I find myself thinking back to this book a lot in the weeks following reading it.
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    This is another book that I listened to after a trial period of an audiobook provider. As I mentioned before, I picked this book because I felt I would not enjoy at all listening to a novel, and I admit I had some curiosity about this book.

    This book is what I call a marketing product. This book gained a lot of attention and, after reading it, I really don't understand why. It is overrated, repetitive, boring and does not give you anything new at all.

    A waste of time, in my opinion.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Book title and author Atomic Habits An Easy & Proven Way to build Good Habits & Break Bad Ones by James Clear reviewed 2-3-24

    Why I picked this book up: there was an Ad for headway called Read Daily to Grow Steadily. The first, second and fourth are books I’ve already read, this book was a free version audiobook so I listed to it. He talks about how easy it is to make excuses and how to change that around for better improvement and daily habits to achieve your desired goal. He focuses more on systems.

    Thoughts:
    I found this book interesting. It is based on basic behaviorism and CBT.
    James Clear, one of the world's leading experts on habit formation, shows practical strategies that can teach how to form good habits, break bad ones, and master the tiny behaviors that lead to results.
    Learn how to:
    • Make time for new habits (even when life gets crazy)
    • Overcome a lack of motivation and willpower
    • Design your environment to make success easier
    • Get back on track when you fall off course
    • And much more
    Atomic Habits can reshape the way you think about progress and success and gives some tools and strategies needed to transform habits.

    Why I finished this read: It was interesting to basically a bx review and easy to finish.

    Stars rating: 5 of 5 stars as this info is basic, laid out logically and is easy to read and implement.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I read this based on glowing recommendations from people I trust. Turns out it's another repetitive, drawn out self-help book I didn't need.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Atomic Habits is one of those books that is easy to read and understand. The stories are mostly relatable and inspiring. It’s easy to see why it has sold so many copies in less than three years.

    The book is filled with actionable information about habits, from how and why we form them to how to break and make them.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Small habits can lead to big positive changes. Make them obvious, attractive, easy & satisfying. (And do the opposite for bad habits you want to break. Has made me think more intentionally about how I go about my day.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Readers who have explored other personal growth books might not encounter dozens of “lightbulb moments” in this popular book. The author wisely notes at the start that this work is a “synthesis of the best ideas smart people figured out” in the past. Still, the author reinforces many effective tactics that have been explored in other works, offering insightful anecdotes and expanding on strategies. The takeaway is that tiny changes in habits can help all of us fulfill our potential. We often mistakenly assume that massive improvements require massive actions. But just as compound interest multiplies in the financial world, compound changes in habits – even minuscule ones — accumulate into surprisingly robust results. Put simply, meaningful change does not require radical change. I found myself jotting down a number of helpful ideas. One involves using “habit trackers” to log step-by-step progress. Trackers can have an addictive effect on making progress toward any goal because they make us feel good about incremental steps. The author also touches on the distinctions between an “immediate return” mindset and a “delayed return” mindset. I would recommend “Atomic Habits” to anyone who is interested in honing their habits to improve everyday living.
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    Exactly correct fundamental idea; utterly worthless, mercenary, & self-undermining detailing/execution. Thus my worst disappointment & timewaster in recent years.

    (NB: Don’t fall for self-help’s familiar implicit guilt-tripping hype, “you’re a loser if you don’t read & apply this”. No. Trying to implement a system as sloppy as this will bring you one step closer to becoming a loser.)
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A good book to help yourself with. Note, I did not call it a self-help book, because it is not , it is more than that. This is a good one.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I’ve heard about this book for years but didn’t have a chance to read it until recently, when I found it as an audiobook in our online library system. This is a very useful book. If you’re wanting to up your game or make some sort of progress in your life, this book could be just the thing you need. For a long time, I’ve set goals and then wallowed in uncertainty as to how to actually achieve them…but in this book, Clear gives repeatable, simple advice for how to start, how to motivate yourself, and how to make definite progress. The techniques taught in this book apply across a vast swath of our everyday lives, not just in the business world. Simple, systematic, and straightforward, this book doesn’t take too long to read, but it’s one that many would find beneficial.

    There were some elements of the book that I didn’t appreciate so much—assumptions around our evolutionary ancestors, almost an “if it’s good for you, it’s good” attitude, some thoughts along the lines of “you can be whoever you want to be”, a few somewhat crude references—but leaving those aside, I appreciated the bulk of the book, and wouldn’t be surprised if I end up rereading it eventually.

    Since reading the book, I’ve put some of his techniques into practice, and I’m seeing a marked improvement already. Whether what I’m doing right now is sustainable long-term or not is another question, but I feel like I’ve been given a few tools that I’ll be able to use over and over in life, and for that, I’m grateful this book was published.

    Recommended for readers aged 18 on up.
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    A decent blog post stretched out to book length.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I didn't think I'd get much out of Atomic Habits but hoped for one or two interesting tidbits that I could incorporate into my life. Once you're as old as I am, you've heard so many tips and tricks and "life-changing advice" that there's rarely anything offered up in a self-help book that's new. But Atomic Habits surprised me. I've already incorporated one idea into my daily routine and feel good about it.

    The thing I liked the most about the book is that the author doesn't pretend to be perfect or have it all figured out but he presents plenty of tiny real-life options that, when added together, can make big changes.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I wish this book had been available when I was much younger. As is, I learned how to make small, meaningful changes to make my habits work for me.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I have an odd liking for reading books about forming (or shedding) habits. This is one of the best I’ve read. You can easily bypass some of the pop-psych stuff, and get to the nitty-gritty, which is an admirably clear and actionable analysis about how to establish good habits or rid yourself of bad ones. It’s a short direct book, with tiny to-the-point chapters, and if you have an interest in improving your own set of habits I’d recommend it.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Lots of good tidbits here, as well as some pretty compelling arguments on how habits are formed (and can be broken). It's an easy read. None of it seems much more than common sense, but putting together all the pieces has value. Definitely worth reading. Then rereading.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Do you want to make new, good habits and break bad ones? Clear takes you through the strategies of how to do it: 1. Make it obvious. 2. Make it attractive. 3. Make it easy. 4. Make it satisfying. Each chapter further breaks those four main "laws" into actionable steps, and also addresses the inverse to get rid of bad habits.

    This was an okay read for me. The writing goes quickly, and it's a very easy read, not dense or difficult at all. He keeps with the practical, which is also fine, but what I actually like to know is the nitty-gritty of why things work the way they do, more like the science-y parts of The Power of Habit, or give me one thing I can use as a takeaway (making your bed is correlated with a lot of other good habits, so why not take the few minutes?). This book... doesn't really have that. It's all or nothing, and it's all practical, "I did this and you can too!" kind of advice. But, to get all the extras on the website and actually do it, you have to sign up for the author's newsletter. There's nothing inherently wrong with any of that, but neither am I inclined to sign up for one more email nor am I actually going to implement every step to add habits to my life. Can I use a few of the tidbits? Sure, I was reminded of a couple of techniques. And early on, he mentioned that it's easier to make habits that fit with our identity (think, "I am the kind of person who _____."), which was an insight I'd never really heard before. A quick read if you're interested, but not one I'd go out of my way to recommend to those who haven't heard of it
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Very useful and easy to understand. I'll have to revisit this book in 2019. :)
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I always take self-help books with a generous pinch of salt and have yet to read one that's fundamentally changed my life, but the better ones can be good reminders of things we know but have forgotten along the way.

    The gist of this book is to provide some pointers around how to make positive habits stick and get into the mindset of small, incremental improvements (around anything you like - exercise, work, character traits, etc.), as well as how to ditch bad habits.

    For the good habits, he looks at ways to make your habit obvious to you (lock yourself down in writing to what you're going to do when and where, and habit stack, e.g. if you want to work on your marriage, 'every time I get into bed at night I'll kiss my husband / wife', or for exercise 'every night I take off my work clothes I'll change into my workout gear', etc.). Conversely, if you want to ditch a bad habit make it invisible - remove your environment cues (obvious one, but get rid of the packet of biscuits if you're wanting to lose weight, for instance).

    The next option is to make a habit attractive by pairing it with something you like / enjoy. If I give up my Starbucks Monday to Friday I'll allow myself to buy a new book every Saturday, for instance. Alternatively, join a community that encourages you to stick to your habit through their positivity about the habit (e.g. a really strong gym tribe), as we're mostly naturally primed to want to please people we admire. Inverting that for bad habits, it's reframing your mindset by focusing on all the benefits of avoiding your bad habit (if I avoid this cigarette I am helping myself to avoid an early death, my clothes and breath will smell nicer, I will have money for a holiday at the end of the year with all the money I've saved).

    The third rule is make your habit easy so you're more likely to stick with it, especially aiming to downscale your habit to 2 minutes. For instance, rather than the good habit being 'do 30 minutes of yoga' the habit can be ' get your yoga mat out'. The point being if you make it less onerous you're more likely to start and then keep at it. Conversely, make your bad habits more difficult (e.g. lock your phone away in a drawer at 7pm every night if your bad habit is mindlessly wasting hours on social media scrolling).

    The last rule is to make your habit satisfying. If you've started weight lifting, keep a record of your workouts so you can see you're progressing, or keep a weekly log of your body measurements so you can see improvement happening. Or pair it with something you enjoy - when I do 10 sit ups I can have a cup of coffee. To make a bad habit unsatisfying, create a habit contract with someone so if you fall off the wagon your fall is public and painful, or ask someone to be your accountability partner.

    Like I said, nothing ground-breaking, but the reinforcement of these approaches in this book does make the ideas stick in your head some.

    3.5 stars - A useful book to dip in and out of in the future, especially when you're wanting to take a big step on something that feels difficult.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Habits are action that we do without thinking. They can be good – flossing teeth before bedtime for example – or bad – being triggered to snack while watching evening television.

    The premise of this book is to progressively make good habits easy to accomplish and bad habits harder to do. There are some thought-provoking ideas. I especially like the technique of habit chaining – adding one additional habit to my usual bedtime or morning routine, for example.

    I found it a useful read; small changes can definitely add up.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    James Clear’s Atomic Habits: An Easy & Proven Way to Build Good Habits & Break Bad Ones provides logical, sensible techniques to enable you to achieve greater success an fulfillment via small, incremental changes. Clear uses real-life examples to illustrate his points, which build into a usable program for self-improvement. Justifiably hailed as one of the best books in the self help field.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Simple, easy steps, not a quick fix but a reasonable plan to change your habits. I found the book to be very interesting, I never knew how we formed our habits. Knowledge is power, understanding how makes it easier to make changes. I loved that it wasn't a cold turkey deal. You take a look at you, what you are doing now daily and think about what you want to do. From there the author shows you how to add small details to your day to develop this new habit.
    I would recommend this anyone who wants to add or leave habits behind. It's a fast read gets to the point quickly.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Becoming 1% better in anything really adds up. Small changes make big difference, but they take time. You do not rise to the level of your goals; you fail to the level of your systems.

    Example of mindset changes: the goal is not to treat a book;the goal is to be a reader.

    Change old habits to begin better ones.

    Connect new habits with old habits.

    Self control is really about structure. If you don't have to use willpower
    because your environment doesn't demand it, you'll do better.

    Realize that the things you need to do are not things you HAVE to do; they are has you are blessed to get to do.

    Matter the smallest version of a new habit, as frequently as possible. Add the next smallest step to the habit, each time. Eventually you will ingrain the habit into your daily routine.

    Make your changes visible, by creating a way to see the reward of your changes. If saving money for a very large goal, reward yourself with a small thing, such as a trip out for ice cream after certain levels have been attained. This will help with motivation.

    Choose the way you identify yourself. Do not identify yourself by your career because someday you will likely no longer work that career. Instead, identify yourself by the character traits that make you a good worker.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    As I write this, Atomic Habits has spent 85 weeks on the New York Times Best Seller list in the category ‘Advice, How-To and Miscellaneous’. This is extraordinary, and out of curiosity I decided to try it.

    James Clear is not a scientist, though he’s a self-declared expert on habits, and my first impression of the book as I read about a childhood accident he had, his experience as a baseball player and businessman, was not a good one. But the book grew on me.

    He writes well, he cites good sources (all footnoted), he sums up his main points at the end of every (very short) chapter, and the book makes sense.

    The basic point – made by him and others who write about this field – seems to be to make small changes, be consistent, and over time you’ll get results.

    If you’re struggling with the examples he frequently cites — you want to lose weight, read more books, do better in your profession, etc. — this book is not a bad place to start.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Definitely contains some worthwhile nuggets such as information about the importance of making habits attractive and obvious. Trying to implement the advice now. :-)
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I’m trying to figure out the massive popularity of this book when it felt like a rehash of things I’ve read before in other books. I got some benefit from some concepts but unfortunately don’t think my life has been changed; oh well.

    Also apparently my new thing is trigger warning people who might suffer from disordered eating as yikes here to that and the fat phobia. I really wish habit books would quit talking about people getting “healthier” by losing weight as if they know anything that they’re talking about; every single chapter mentions some sort of dieting so be forewarned.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This book has so many good tips in it -- it's a great read if you want to jumpstart some good habits or possibly steer away from bad ones. Clear's style of writing is entertaining and he provides lots of good examples that both encourage and inspire.

Book preview

Atomic Habits - James Clear

Cover for Atomic HabitsBook title, Atomic Habits, Subtitle, An Easy & Proven Way to Build Good Habits & Break Bad Ones, author, James Clear, imprint, Avery

AN IMPRINT OF PENGUIN RANDOM HOUSE LLC

penguinrandomhouse.com

Copyright © 2018 by James Clear

Penguin supports copyright. Copyright fuels creativity, encourages diverse voices, promotes free speech, and creates a vibrant culture. Thank you for buying an authorized edition of this book and for complying with copyright laws by not reproducing, scanning, or distributing any part of it in any form without permission. You are supporting writers and allowing Penguin to continue to publish books for every reader.

Ebook ISBN 9780735211308

While the author has made every effort to provide accurate Internet addresses at the time of publication, neither the publisher nor the author assumes any responsibility for errors, or for changes that occur after publication. Further, the publisher does not have any control over and does not assume any responsibility for author or third-party websites or their content.

btb_ppg_148350561_c0_r6

a·tom·ic

əˈtämik

an extremely small amount of a thing; the single irreducible unit of a larger system.

the source of immense energy or power.

hab·it

ˈhabət

a routine or practice performed regularly; an automatic response to a specific situation.

Contents

Title Page

Copyright

Epigraph

Introduction: My Story

The Fundamentals

Why Tiny Changes Make a Big Difference

1   The Surprising Power of Atomic Habits

2   How Your Habits Shape Your Identity (and Vice Versa)

3   How to Build Better Habits in 4 Simple Steps

The 1st Law

Make It Obvious

4   The Man Who Didn’t Look Right

5   The Best Way to Start a New Habit

6   Motivation Is Overrated; Environment Often Matters More

7   The Secret to Self-Control

The 2nd Law

Make It Attractive

8   How to Make a Habit Irresistible

9   The Role of Family and Friends in Shaping Your Habits

10  How to Find and Fix the Causes of Your Bad Habits

The 3rd Law

Make It Easy

11  Walk Slowly, but Never Backward

12  The Law of Least Effort

13  How to Stop Procrastinating by Using the Two-Minute Rule

14  How to Make Good Habits Inevitable and Bad Habits Impossible

The 4th Law

Make It Satisfying

15  The Cardinal Rule of Behavior Change

16  How to Stick with Good Habits Every Day

17  How an Accountability Partner Can Change Everything

Advanced Tactics

How to Go from Being Merely Good to Being Truly Great

18  The Truth About Talent (When Genes Matter and When They Don’t)

19  The Goldilocks Rule: How to Stay Motivated in Life and Work

20  The Downside of Creating Good Habits

Conclusion: The Secret to Results That Last

Appendix

What Should You Read Next?

Little Lessons from the Four Laws

How to Apply These Ideas to Business

How to Apply These Ideas to Parenting

Acknowledgments

Notes

Index

About the Author

_148350561_

Introduction

My Story

ON THE FINAL day of my sophomore year of high school, I was hit in the face with a baseball bat. As my classmate took a full swing, the bat slipped out of his hands and came flying toward me before striking me directly between the eyes. I have no memory of the moment of impact.

The bat smashed into my face with such force that it crushed my nose into a distorted U-shape. The collision sent the soft tissue of my brain slamming into the inside of my skull. Immediately, a wave of swelling surged throughout my head. In a fraction of a second, I had a broken nose, multiple skull fractures, and two shattered eye sockets.

When I opened my eyes, I saw people staring at me and running over to help. I looked down and noticed spots of red on my clothes. One of my classmates took the shirt off his back and handed it to me. I used it to plug the stream of blood rushing from my broken nose. Shocked and confused, I was unaware of how seriously I had been injured.

My teacher looped his arm around my shoulder and we began the long walk to the nurse’s office: across the field, down the hill, and back into school. Random hands touched my sides, holding me upright. We took our time and walked slowly. Nobody realized that every minute mattered.

When we arrived at the nurse’s office, she asked me a series of questions.

What year is it?

1998, I answered. It was actually 2002.

Who is the president of the United States?

Bill Clinton, I said. The correct answer was George W. Bush.

What is your mom’s name?

Uh. Um. I stalled. Ten seconds passed.

Patti, I said casually, ignoring the fact that it had taken me ten seconds to remember my own mother’s name.

That is the last question I remember. My body was unable to handle the rapid swelling in my brain and I lost consciousness before the ambulance arrived. Minutes later, I was carried out of school and taken to the local hospital.

Shortly after arriving, my body began shutting down. I struggled with basic functions like swallowing and breathing. I had my first seizure of the day. Then I stopped breathing entirely. As the doctors hurried to supply me with oxygen, they also decided the local hospital was unequipped to handle the situation and ordered a helicopter to fly me to a larger hospital in Cincinnati.

I was rolled out of the emergency room doors and toward the helipad across the street. The stretcher rattled on a bumpy sidewalk as one nurse pushed me along while another pumped each breath into me by hand. My mother, who had arrived at the hospital a few moments before, climbed into the helicopter beside me. I remained unconscious and unable to breathe on my own as she held my hand during the flight.

While my mother rode with me in the helicopter, my father went home to check on my brother and sister and break the news to them. He choked back tears as he explained to my sister that he would miss her eighth-grade graduation ceremony that night. After passing my siblings off to family and friends, he drove to Cincinnati to meet my mother.

When my mom and I landed on the roof of the hospital, a team of nearly twenty doctors and nurses sprinted onto the helipad and wheeled me into the trauma unit. By this time, the swelling in my brain had become so severe that I was having repeated post-traumatic seizures. My broken bones needed to be fixed, but I was in no condition to undergo surgery. After yet another seizure—my third of the day—I was put into a medically induced coma and placed on a ventilator.

My parents were no strangers to this hospital. Ten years earlier, they had entered the same building on the ground floor after my sister was diagnosed with leukemia at age three. I was five at the time. My brother was just six months old. After two and a half years of chemotherapy treatments, spinal taps, and bone marrow biopsies, my little sister finally walked out of the hospital happy, healthy, and cancer free. And now, after ten years of normal life, my parents found themselves back in the same place with a different child.

While I slipped into a coma, the hospital sent a priest and a social worker to comfort my parents. It was the same priest who had met with them a decade earlier on the evening they found out my sister had cancer.

As day faded into night, a series of machines kept me alive. My parents slept restlessly on a hospital mattress—one moment they would collapse from fatigue, the next they would be wide awake with worry. My mother would tell me later, It was one of the worst nights I’ve ever had.

MY RECOVERY

Mercifully, by the next morning my breathing had rebounded to the point where the doctors felt comfortable releasing me from the coma. When I finally regained consciousness, I discovered that I had lost my ability to smell. As a test, a nurse asked me to blow my nose and sniff an apple juice box. My sense of smell returned, but—to everyone’s surprise—the act of blowing my nose forced air through the fractures in my eye socket and pushed my left eye outward. My eyeball bulged out of the socket, held precariously in place by my eyelid and the optic nerve attaching my eye to my brain.

The ophthalmologist said my eye would gradually slide back into place as the air seeped out, but it was hard to tell how long this would take. I was scheduled for surgery one week later, which would allow me some additional time to heal. I looked like I had been on the wrong end of a boxing match, but I was cleared to leave the hospital. I returned home with a broken nose, half a dozen facial fractures, and a bulging left eye.

The following months were hard. It felt like everything in my life was on pause. I had double vision for weeks; I literally couldn’t see straight. It took more than a month, but my eyeball did eventually return to its normal location. Between the seizures and my vision problems, it was eight months before I could drive a car again. At physical therapy, I practiced basic motor patterns like walking in a straight line. I was determined not to let my injury get me down, but there were more than a few moments when I felt depressed and overwhelmed.

I became painfully aware of how far I had to go when I returned to the baseball field one year later. Baseball had always been a major part of my life. My dad had played minor league baseball for the St. Louis Cardinals, and I had a dream of playing professionally, too. After months of rehabilitation, what I wanted more than anything was to get back on the field.

But my return to baseball was not smooth. When the season rolled around, I was the only junior to be cut from the varsity baseball team. I was sent down to play with the sophomores on junior varsity. I had been playing since age four, and for someone who had spent so much time and effort on the sport, getting cut was humiliating. I vividly remember the day it happened. I sat in my car and cried as I flipped through the radio, desperately searching for a song that would make me feel better.

After a year of self-doubt, I managed to make the varsity team as a senior, but I rarely made it on the field. In total, I played eleven innings of high school varsity baseball, barely more than a single game.

Despite my lackluster high school career, I still believed I could become a great player. And I knew that if things were going to improve, I was the one responsible for making it happen. The turning point came two years after my injury, when I began college at Denison University. It was a new beginning, and it was the place where I would discover the surprising power of small habits for the first time.

HOW I LEARNED ABOUT HABITS

Attending Denison was one of the best decisions of my life. I earned a spot on the baseball team and, although I was at the bottom of the roster as a freshman, I was thrilled. Despite the chaos of my high school years, I had managed to become a college athlete.

I wasn’t going to be starting on the baseball team anytime soon, so I focused on getting my life in order. While my peers stayed up late and played video games, I built good sleep habits and went to bed early each night. In the messy world of a college dorm, I made a point to keep my room neat and tidy. These improvements were minor, but they gave me a sense of control over my life. I started to feel confident again. And this growing belief in myself rippled into the classroom as I improved my study habits and managed to earn straight A’s during my first year.

A habit is a routine or behavior that is performed regularly—and, in many cases, automatically. As each semester passed, I accumulated small but consistent habits that ultimately led to results that were unimaginable to me when I started. For example, for the first time in my life, I made it a habit to lift weights multiple times per week, and in the years that followed, my six-foot-four-inch frame bulked up from a featherweight 170 to a lean 200 pounds.

When my sophomore season arrived, I earned a starting role on the pitching staff. By my junior year, I was voted team captain and at the end of the season, I was selected for the all-conference team. But it was not until my senior season that my sleep habits, study habits, and strength-training habits really began to pay off.

Six years after I had been hit in the face with a baseball bat, flown to the hospital, and placed into a coma, I was selected as the top male athlete at Denison University and named to the ESPN Academic All-America Team—an honor given to just thirty-three players across the country. By the time I graduated, I was listed in the school record books in eight different categories. That same year, I was awarded the university’s highest academic honor, the President’s Medal.

I hope you’ll forgive me if this sounds boastful. To be honest, there was nothing legendary or historic about my athletic career. I never ended up playing professionally. However, looking back on those years, I believe I accomplished something just as rare: I fulfilled my potential. And I believe the concepts in this book can help you fulfill your potential as well.

We all face challenges in life. This injury was one of mine, and the experience taught me a critical lesson: changes that seem small and unimportant at first will compound into remarkable results if you’re willing to stick with them for years. We all deal with setbacks but in the long run, the quality of our lives often depends on the quality of our habits. With the same habits, you’ll end up with the same results. But with better habits, anything is possible.

Maybe there are people who can achieve incredible success overnight. I don’t know any of them, and I’m certainly not one of them. There wasn’t one defining moment on my journey from medically induced coma to Academic All-American; there were many. It was a gradual evolution, a long series of small wins and tiny breakthroughs. The only way I made progress—the only choice I had—was to start small. And I employed this same strategy a few years later when I started my own business and began working on this book.

HOW AND WHY I WROTE THIS BOOK

In November 2012, I began publishing articles at jamesclear.com. For years, I had been keeping notes about my personal experiments with habits and I was finally ready to share some of them publicly. I began by publishing a new article every Monday and Thursday. Within a few months, this simple writing habit led to my first one thousand email subscribers, and by the end of 2013 that number had grown to more than thirty thousand people.

In 2014, my email list expanded to over one hundred thousand subscribers, which made it one of the fastest-growing newsletters on the internet. I had felt like an impostor when I began writing two years earlier, but now I was becoming known as an expert on habits—a new label that excited me but also felt uncomfortable. I had never considered myself a master of the topic, but rather someone who was experimenting alongside my readers.

In 2015, I reached two hundred thousand email subscribers and signed a book deal with Penguin Random House to begin writing the book you are reading now. As my audience grew, so did my business opportunities. I was increasingly asked to speak at top companies about the science of habit formation, behavior change, and continuous improvement. I found myself delivering keynote speeches at conferences in the United States and Europe.

By 2016, my articles began to appear regularly in major publications like Time, Entrepreneur, and Forbes. Incredibly, my writing was read by over eight million people that year. Coaches in the NFL, NBA, and MLB began reading my work and sharing it with their teams.

At the start of 2017, I launched the Habits Academy, which became the premier training platform for organizations and individuals interested in building better habits in life and work.* Fortune 500 companies and growing start-ups began to enroll their leaders and train their staff. In total, over ten thousand leaders, managers, coaches, and teachers have graduated from the Habits Academy, and my work with them has taught me an incredible amount about what it takes to make habits work in the real world.

As I put the finishing touches on this book in 2018, jamesclear.com is receiving millions of visitors per month and nearly five hundred thousand people subscribe to my weekly email newsletter—a number that is so far beyond my expectations when I began that I’m not even sure what to think of it.

HOW THIS BOOK WILL BENEFIT YOU

The entrepreneur and investor Naval Ravikant has said, To write a great book, you must first become the book. I originally learned about the ideas mentioned here because I had to live them. I had to rely on small habits to rebound from my injury, to get stronger in the gym, to perform at a high level on the field, to become a writer, to build a successful business, and simply to develop into a responsible adult. Small habits helped me fulfill my potential, and since you picked up this book, I’m guessing you’d like to fulfill yours as well.

In the pages that follow, I will share a step-by-step plan for building better habits—not for days or weeks, but for a lifetime. While science supports everything I’ve written, this book is not an academic research paper; it’s an operating manual. You’ll find wisdom and practical advice front and center as I explain the science of how to create and change your habits in a way that is easy to understand and apply.

The fields I draw on—biology, neuroscience, philosophy, psychology, and more—have been around for many years. What I offer you is a synthesis of the best ideas smart people figured out a long time ago as well as the most compelling discoveries scientists have made recently. My contribution, I hope, is to find the ideas that matter most and connect them in a way that is highly actionable. Anything wise in these pages you should credit to the many experts who preceded me. Anything foolish, assume it is my error.

The backbone of this book is my four-step model of habits—cue, craving, response, and reward—and the four laws of behavior change that evolve out of these steps. Readers with a psychology background may recognize some of these terms from operant conditioning, which was first proposed as stimulus, response, reward by B. F. Skinner in the 1930s and has been popularized more recently as cue, routine, reward in The Power of Habit by Charles Duhigg.

Behavioral scientists like Skinner realized that if you offered the right reward or punishment, you could get people to act in a certain way. But while Skinner’s model did an excellent job of explaining how external stimuli influenced our habits, it lacked a good explanation for how our thoughts, feelings, and beliefs impact our behavior. Internal states—our moods and emotions—matter, too. In recent decades, scientists have begun to determine the connection between our thoughts, feelings, and behavior. This research will also be covered in these pages.

In total, the framework I offer is an integrated model of the cognitive and behavioral sciences. I believe it is one of the first models of human behavior to accurately account for both the influence of external stimuli and internal emotions on our habits. While some of the language may be familiar, I am confident that the details—and the applications of the Four Laws of Behavior Change—will offer a new way to think about your habits.

Human behavior is always changing: situation to situation, moment to moment, second to second. But this book is about what doesn’t change. It’s about the fundamentals of human behavior. The lasting principles you can rely on year after year. The ideas you can build a business around, build a family around, build a life around.

There is no one right way to create better habits, but this book describes the best way I know—an approach that will be effective regardless of where you start or what you’re trying to change. The strategies I cover will be relevant to anyone looking for a step-by-step system for improvement, whether your goals center on health, money, productivity, relationships, or all of the above. As long as human behavior is involved, this book will be your guide.

THE

FUNDAMENTALS

Why Tiny Changes Make a Big Difference

1

The Surprising Power of Atomic Habits

THE FATE OF British Cycling changed one day in 2003. The organization, which was the governing body for professional cycling in Great Britain, had recently hired Dave Brailsford as its new performance director. At the time, professional cyclists in Great Britain had endured nearly one hundred years of mediocrity. Since 1908, British road cyclers had won just a single gold medal at the Olympic Games, and they had fared even worse in cycling’s biggest race, the Tour de France. In 110 years, no British cyclist had ever won the event.

In fact, the performance of British riders had been so underwhelming that one of the top bike manufacturers in Europe refused to sell bikes to the team because they were afraid that it would hurt sales if other professionals saw the Brits using their gear.

Brailsford had been hired to put British Cycling on a new trajectory. What made him different from previous coaches was his relentless commitment to a strategy that he referred to as the aggregation of marginal gains, which was the philosophy of searching for a tiny margin of improvement in everything you do. Brailsford said, The whole principle came from the idea that if you broke down everything you could think of that goes into riding a bike, and then improve it by 1 percent, you will get a significant increase when you put them all together.

Brailsford and his coaches began by making small adjustments you might expect from a professional cycling team. They redesigned the bike seats to make them more comfortable and rubbed alcohol on the tires for a better grip. They asked riders to wear electrically heated overshorts to maintain ideal

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