00:00:00If we want to change our lives we're often told that we need to think big,
00:00:03make drastic changes or perhaps even move across continents. But what if we could achieve major
00:00:08transformations just through small tweaks to our daily routines? We all tend to overestimate the
00:00:13importance of single actions and underestimate the power of making small improvements repetitively
00:00:18over a longer period of time. Real change comes from the compound effects of hundreds of small
00:00:23decisions or small habits that over time accumulate to produce remarkable results, changing our
00:00:28lifestyles behaviors and identities. Hey friends welcome back to the channel and to the second
00:00:32episode of book club a new series where I summarize the key insights and ideas from some of my favorite
00:00:37books and today we're talking about atomic habits by James Clear which is all about the power and
00:00:42process of building good habits and breaking bad ones. Through examples from sports business
00:00:46and education along with evidence from psychology and neuroscience the book explains the science and
00:00:51practical implications of how tiny habits and minuscule changes can grow into life altering
00:00:56outcomes and help us lead healthier happier and more productive lives. So there's basically four
00:01:02key insights from this book that we're going to talk about in turn. Firstly we'll talk about the
00:01:05power of one percent changes over time. Secondly why we should screw goals and focus on systems
00:01:10instead. Thirdly why it's all about identities rather than outcomes and finally we'll look at
00:01:14what our boy James calls the four fundamental laws of behavior change. So firstly why does one percent
00:01:20matter? Well it's all about the power of compounding. Compounding can be amazingly powerful both
00:01:26positively and negatively if we leave it to develop over a period of time. If we can get one percent
00:01:31better each day for a year we'll end up 37 times better by the time we're done. But if we get one
00:01:37percent worse each day for one year we'll go down nearly to zero. As James says in his book habits
00:01:42are the compound interest of self-improvement. Habits don't seem to make much difference on a
00:01:47given day but the impact over months or years can be absolutely enormous. We don't often think about
00:01:52these small changes just because it takes so long to see the result like this is something that I
00:01:56really struggle with and I think this probably applies to everyone like we're so attuned in
00:02:00modern society to try and seek instant gratification that it's actually really hard to focus on things
00:02:04that have long-term benefits. Equally the slow rate of transformation also means that it's really
00:02:09easy to let bad habits creep in like eating badly and not exercising and when we repeat these one
00:02:15percent errors day after day they'll accumulate into larger problems. As James says in the book
00:02:20time magnifies the margin between success and failure it will multiply whatever you feed it.
00:02:25Good habits make time your ally bad habits make time your enemy. One of the other key points from
00:02:31our boy James's analysis of habits is what he calls the plateau of latent potential which sounds all
00:02:36very fancy. Habits often don't seem to make a difference until we cross a critical threshold.
00:02:41We expect progress to be linear but the key aspect of any compounding process is that the outcomes
00:02:46are delayed. This leads to an initial valley of disappointment where we don't feel like we're
00:02:50making progress as the results don't follow the linear trajectory that we expect and so we just
00:02:55give up because we're not getting the results we wanted. But as we can see from the graph it does
00:03:00take time to build a habit to allow the compound interest of self-improvement to take hold and give
00:03:05us amazing results over time. Key point number two from the book is to screw goals and focus on systems
00:03:10instead. James identifies four main problems with goal setting. Firstly winners and losers have the
00:03:16same goals. Every Olympian wants the gold medal every candidate wants the job and so it can't be
00:03:21the goal that actually differentiates people. Secondly achieving a goal is only a momentary
00:03:25change. Sure I might be able to pluck up the activation energy to bring myself to clean my room
00:03:30but if I continue my waste man habits and systems that led to the room getting messy in the first
00:03:34place I'm just going to be left with a messy room again in a few days time. In the same way when we
00:03:39achieve a goal we only change our life for the moment we get these temporary results. Instead what
00:03:44we really need to change is the systems that cause those results in the first place. Thirdly James
00:03:49argues that goals restrict our happiness. There's an implicit assumption behind any goal and that's
00:03:53once I reach my goal then I'll be happy and so we end up continuously putting off happiness until
00:03:58the next milestone. Finally goals are at odds with long-term progress. There's another really nice
00:04:03quote here the purpose of setting goals is to win the game the purpose of building systems is to
00:04:08continue playing the game. Like for me with this youtube channel I deliberately don't have any goals
00:04:13for it because like what's the point I mean I might say to myself oh it would be you know my goal is to
00:04:17hit a million subscribers by next year or whatever but like I'm not trying to win youtube by hitting
00:04:22a certain subscriber count I just love the process of making these videos and it's fun and it's great
00:04:26and it makes money and it's sustainable it's just like I want to continue playing the game I don't
00:04:30want to try to win the game. It's this idea between the system and the goal and uh you know like say
00:04:34you're you're playing a sport in every sport the goal is to have the best score on the scoreboard
00:04:39at the end of the game but it would be ridiculous to spend all game looking at the scoreboard because
00:04:44it wouldn't help you in any way so in fact if you just ignored the score the entire time and just
00:04:48focus on a better process or playing a better way or a better scheme or strategy then you probably
00:04:54would end up with the best score. I think Bill Walsh he was the Super Bowl winning head coach for the
00:04:58San Francisco 49ers he had this quote it was like the score takes care of itself
00:05:02and that I think that probably applies to a lot of tracking and measurement so now that we've seen
00:05:06why systems are so important key point number three is another quote from the book and that is
00:05:11identity change is the north star of habit change we've got outcomes on the outside
00:05:16concerned with changing the results and then processes related to our habits and systems
00:05:20and finally our identity which is related to our beliefs most of us work from outcome to identity
00:05:26rather than identity to outcome but as our boy James says the ultimate form of intrinsic motivation
00:05:31is when a habit becomes part of our identity when we solve problems in terms of outcomes and results
00:05:36we only solve them temporarily but to solve problems in the longer term at the systems level
00:05:41we need to change our identity this point really resonated with me when I first read the book like
00:05:46I've been struggling personally with a eating healthily and b going to the gym for the last
00:05:50several years and before I used to have an outcomes based way of looking at it so I used to think I
00:05:55want to get rid of my belly fat therefore I'm going to follow Tim Ferriss's slow carb diet therefore
00:06:00I'll be a healthy person but since reading the book I now have more of a identity based approach
00:06:05to looking at this so I think like I try to think in my head I am a healthy person therefore as a
00:06:10healthy person I will eat wholesome food and exercise regularly and then one day maybe I'll
00:06:15look like Zac Efron um we'll see how that goes and finally point number four at this point we're
00:06:20thinking okay cool I'm sold on the idea of building useful habits I'm sold on the idea that it's all
00:06:24about tiny improvements over a very long time and it's all about systems rather than goals but how do
00:06:29we actually build those habits in the first place how do we overcome the difficulty well I'm glad
00:06:34you asked because we can actually split up the process of building habits into four stages
00:06:38Q craving response and reward the Q triggers the brain to initiate an action the craving provides
00:06:44the motivational force the response is the action or habit that we perform and the reward is the end
00:06:50goal and it's these four things Q craving response and reward which lead to what James Clear calls the
00:06:56four laws of behavior change the first law is make it obvious and it relates to designing our
00:07:02environment around our cues I applied this to my life just the other day actually so for the last
00:07:06year plus I've been taking a tablet called finasteride to combat my hair loss and in fact
00:07:10people have been commenting the videos that oh your hair looks thicker so thank you but recently I
00:07:14realized I was vitamin D deficient as well because I spent way too much time in front of a computer
00:07:18and don't ever leave the house and so I got these vitamin D tablets but I kept on forgetting to take
00:07:22them and I realized the reason I kept forgetting to take them is because they were on the other
00:07:27side of the kitchen to my finasteride that I take every day as a habit and so all I did was I moved
00:07:32the vitamin D tablets over to the other side of the kitchen and now I see them in front of my finasteride
00:07:37and therefore I take both tablets every night so just a little change that has now built that
00:07:41habit almost immediately kind of the the principle of environment design in general which is you want
00:07:46to put fewer steps between you and the good behaviors and more steps between you and the
00:07:49bad ones and imagine the cumulative impact of living an environment that exposes you to
00:07:55the cues of your positive habits and reduces the cues of your negative habits it's kind of like
00:08:00you're just gently being nudged in the right direction each day the second law is make it
00:08:04attractive which relates to the craving aspect of the habit loop and tries to take advantage of what
00:08:08we know about dopamine as humans we're all motivated by the anticipation of reward so making habits
00:08:14attractive will help us stick to them and in fact one of the make it attractive things that I did
00:08:18for going to the gym is that I started listening to fantasy audiobooks on audible and this would be
00:08:23the perfect time to do an audible plug but sadly no one is sponsoring this video so I hope you
00:08:28enjoy this ad free experience the third law is make it easy and the main aim here is to reduce
00:08:33the friction and to prime our environment for the habits that we'd like to develop there's a phrase
00:08:38that I like that I think I came up with but I'm probably actually read it somewhere and then just
00:08:41forgot to cite the source anyway the phrase is that friction is the most powerful force in the universe
00:08:47I've seen this so many times in my own life like anything I can do to reduce the friction to make
00:08:51doing a good thing slightly easier will pay dividends in the long run like having a piano
00:08:55right next to me having a guitar next to my desk means that my default procrastination when I'm you
00:09:00know when I can't be bothered to do any work or film a video is that I will play the guitar or
00:09:04practice some stuff on the piano like reducing the friction makes it far more likely for me to do the
00:09:08thing and the fourth law is make it immediately satisfying our brains have evolved to prioritize
00:09:14immediate rewards over delayed rewards and the cardinal rule of behavior change is what is
00:09:18immediately rewarded is repeated and what is immediately punished is avoided we get short-term
00:09:23bursts of dopamine from going through the mcdonald's drive-through or scrolling aimlessly through
00:09:27instagram making us more likely to repeat these bad habits to develop better habits james says
00:09:33that we should try to attach some form of immediate gratification so that we can make the habit
00:09:37immediately satisfying after reading the book I realized that I needed to make this going to the
00:09:41gym thing more immediately satisfying sometimes if I'm going to the gym after work I'll do my
00:09:46workout and then I will jump in the swimming pool do like a length or two just for fun and then go
00:09:50into the spa and just kind of read a book for like 20 minutes and this sounds really privileged and
00:09:54spoiled but like the fact that I've got those activities lined up after going to the gym
00:09:59makes the whole process of going to the gym more immediately satisfying which means I'm far more
00:10:03likely to do it so by combining these laws and their opposites we've got this diagram that comes
00:10:07from the book we want to ensure that our good habits are positioned towards the left side of the spectrum
00:10:11to make them obvious attractive easy and satisfying and we want to work to make our bad habits more
00:10:16difficult by making the cues invisible the action unattractive and hard and the reward unsatisfying
00:10:22in an ideal world we rarely stop to think about our own habits or plan for long-term change when
00:10:27we start a new regime like going to the gym the great power of atomic habits is the emphasis that
00:10:31it places on systems rather than goals identity rather than outcomes and small habits rather than
00:10:36drastic change there isn't a precise answer to how long it takes to build a habit because habits are
00:10:41not a finish line to cross but a lifestyle to live the key part to remember is that small habits
00:10:45compound atomic habits may be individually small but collectively and given time they can hold
00:10:51remarkable power to bring remarkable change to our lives thank you so much for watching
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