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Lucas Maddy
@lucasmaddy
Book Review: Atomic Habits, by James Clear What I Agreed With: Flipping the script. If you want to create a good habit, Clear recommends that you makes it: obvious, attractive, easy, and satisfying. Conversely, to discourage yourself from pursing undesired habits, make them not-obvious, unattractive, difficult, and unsatisfying. The Cue/Craving/Reward/Response cycle is illuminative for everyone. I could say everyone who wants to improve, but I think that's short-sighted. Everyone fundamentally wants things to be better, but often they view the cost of change as too high. Implementing CCRR is a way to decrease the friction between "time to do it" and "doing it" in a way that can help the struggling find ease in accomplishing things they once thought beyond them.
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Lucas  Maddy pfp
Lucas Maddy
@lucasmaddy
What I Disagreed With: Nothing. Perhaps this makes me appear to be a shallow thinker, incapable of finding contention, but it's an honest answer. I've implemented, at one time or another, in one form or another, everything in the book. Positive results came from all. One could potentially say that it becomes "too much" and that the danger exists that in falling short - failing to track habits, or "falling off the wagon" in some manner or another" - can result in a downward spiral that possibly takes the person lower than they were before. I understand this danger. We fear our own capability, in part because we fear becoming great and losing greatness. In taking control of your environment, cues, and habits, you become a hero to yourself. As the saying goes - we die heros or live long enough to become villains. And the truth is we are both - hero and villain. Angel and devil. We can choose who to listen to, who to give attention to, and ulitimately - we choose our identity.
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Barry
@eatincrayonz
@truthrr what do you think about this post?
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