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  • A habit is a fixed way of thinking

  • that leads to automatic behavior.

  • The benefit is we don't have to rethink again and again what to do.

  • It just happens and can have good side effects.

  • But a bad habit can also hurt us

  • or hold us back from progressing.

  • Although, like anything, we can learn and unlearn them.

  • But first, let's try to understand where they come from.

  • Habits are made by experiences

  • creating fixed ways of thinking inside our brain.

  • To explain this,

  • let's compare what happens inside your brain

  • to what happens on a farm.

  • There is a farmer named Joe,

  • his vegetable garden,

  • the chicken shed and a mailbox.

  • Every morning farmer Joe first walks to the vegetables,

  • then checks on his chickens,

  • then collects his mail and then walks back to the house.

  • After a few days of this routine,

  • his trace becomes more visible on his farm.

  • After a few months, the trace becomes fixed pathways.

  • Not only on his farm, but also inside his brain.

  • One night Joe has a magical dream

  • where he discovers his love with all living creatures.

  • The next day he sets all of his chickens free.

  • The funny thing is though,

  • instead of adjusting his behavior,

  • he still walks blindly from the vegetable garden to the chicken shed.

  • The trace on the ground, and inside Joe's brain

  • are now just too deep.

  • To leave the path of habit, we have to go down a new road.

  • This takes time multiple repetitions of our new desired behavior

  • and willpower to keep going.

  • A habit is often a response to a certain trigger,

  • which follows a routine and usually ends with a reward.

  • This is also called a habit loop.

  • Joe's trigger is the vegetables.

  • As soon as he waters the last tomato,

  • he starts his next routine to automatically walk to the chickens.

  • His reward is to find eggs.

  • And because rewards release dopamine,

  • a neurotransmitter that makes our brain first happy and then hooked,

  • we get stuck and can't let go anymore.

  • Joe's sister lives in the city.

  • She has a funny habit.

  • Whenever she hears her phone,

  • she automatically looks at the screen.

  • Most of the time it's just a random irrelevant message.

  • This happens even if something far more important

  • was happening right in that moment.

  • The sound from the phone triggers a routine in the hope for a sweet reward

  • and some of that addictive dopamine.

  • To change a habit, journalist Charles Duhigg recommends redesigning the habit loop.

  • Say you like going to the movie theater,

  • but whenever you do, you eat too much of that sweet popcorn.

  • In this case your trigger is the popcorn

  • stand that you pass by whenever you go to the movies.

  • Your routine is buying that popcorn.

  • And your reward is snacking during the film.

  • To change your habit,

  • you could keep the trigger and keep the reward,

  • but replace the routine.

  • Instead of sweet, get salty popcorn.

  • Later maybe even fruits.

  • If a problem gets very serious,

  • remove the trigger.

  • Stop buying movie tickets.

  • If we can't leave our phone alone,

  • we can turn off all the notifications.

  • And if we have friends that get us into situations

  • that can trigger a bad habit,

  • we can make new friends that don't.

  • Some habits are tricky.

  • Procrastination for example.

  • There is no clear trigger, routine or reward.

  • It just happens.

  • Habits like that can be changed in tiny steps

  • that leads to small rewards.

  • Next time you procrastinate,

  • try to make some short breaks in which you focus.

  • Your trigger can be the full hour on your clock.

  • Once you hear it, focus on your work

  • even if it is just for 5 minutes.

  • After, reward yourself with a piece of chocolate.

  • The very first day you do that,

  • you will already create some new traces in your brain

  • and the next day some more.

  • After a few weeks, it will be easy to walk down that road.

  • Many small steps added together, make a big difference over time.

  • After all, we still have our entire life in front of us.

  • And to becomes successful, good habits are probably our best bet.

  • As the famous poet John Dryden wrote:

  • We first make our habits, and then our habits make us.”

  • Tell us. Have you ever learn or unlearned a habit?

  • Please share your experience in the comments below!

A habit is a fixed way of thinking

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