7 Takes From
Atomic Habits
You do not rise to the level of your goals. You fall to the level of your systems.
Disclaimer:
Everything I share here are my opinions, thoughts and views.
Hello IsmileWorld, Welcome back to
the review of another great read. I first read the atomic habits on March, 2020
and my last read of this book was few days ago. This book has helped me build a
whole workshop on habit formation and has personally taught me how to make and
break habits.
The author James Clear is a writer and a speaker focused on habits, decision-making and continuous improvement. His thoughts on the book are:
Atomic Habits is the most comprehensive and practical guide on how to create good habits, break bad ones, and get 1 percent better every day. I do not believe you will find a more actionable book on the subject of habits and improvement.
If you’re having trouble changing your habits, the problem isn’t you. The problem is your system.
Bad habits repeat themselves not because you don’t want to change but because you have the wrong system for change. This is one of the core philosophies of Atomic Habits: You do not rise to the level of your goals. You fall to the level of your systems. In this book, you’ll get a proven plan that can take you to new heights.
Here are my 7 key take-aways from the book:
1. How Habits shape your identity
To change your identity, you first have to change your outcomes and
processes. Your outcomes are the goals you set and processes are the systems
and routines you follow. In other words, outcomes are what you get, processes are
what you do and identity is what you believe. The most effective way to change
your habits is to focus not on what you want to achieve, but on what you wish
to become.
I remember when I started my reading journey. I was never
interested in which book I read or if I finished it. My main goal was to become
a reader. I went to the library daily from morning and stayed till late afternoons reading
every book I see. When I got bored, I read the next one in line. These processes
and outcomes gave me the identity of a reader. Today, friends ask me if I read
this book and if I would recommend them to read. I might have not read all the books they
ask but I know the outcome they might get from it and can recommend them a book.
Don’t think like ‘I want to read this book (outcome) and if I read
30 pages a day, I will finish it (process).
The goal is not to read a book, the goal is to become a reader.
The goal is not to run a marathon, the goal is to become a runner.
The goal is not to wake up early, the goal is to be productive in the
mornings.
2. 2. The Four Stages of Habit Formation
Simply, the four stages are two problem phases and two solution
phases. The two problem phases are the cue and craving and the solution phases
are the response and the reward.
·
Cue:
the trigger which predicts a reward: the buzzing of your phone with a new SMS;
·
Craving:
the motivational force behind every habit; what makes you act; in the case
above, you want to learn the content of the message;
·
Response:
the actual habit you perform: you grab your phone and read the text;
·
Reward:
the end goal of every habit: the cue is all about noticing the reward, the
craving about wanting it, and the response about obtaining it; once the reward
comes your way, your craving is satisfied;
I am a visual student and explain better visually, if you need to
understand more on this, Please let me know in the comments and I will make a video out of it
Inshaalah.
3. 3. How
to Create a Good Habit
1st Law (Cue): Make it obvious
2nd Law (Craving): Make it attractive
3rd Law (Response): Make it easy
4th Law (Reward): Make it satisfying
The main idea about habit formation is to fall in love with something.
To fall in love, all the good things that make us happy has to align there. The
4 laws mentioned above are just mindset shifts, working on the mind falling in
love with an activity. For example, I want to become a reader. To do that, I have
to make my cue and triggers very obvious. If you want to make people see you to
be smart, you dress smart and speak smart. If you want to be seen strong, you
show off your muscles and strength. If you want to be seen a reader, you should
be making it more obvious. Carry books around, network with other readers and
put your books around you all the time. Your mind will be tempted and triggered
to read and that is the start of your habit formation. Always carry a notebook to jot down all ideas you gather along the way and come back to reading them another time.
The second law is to make your craving attractive. Everything that
makes you act has to be attractive. Choose a good book you will fall in love
with. Read the reviews and the talking points from other people. Do anything that
will make you be attracted to your next read.
The third law is to make your response easy. This is the part you
grab your phone to read that juicy text from your girlfriend. Start with 50
pages book then move to 70 pages and up you go. When I get lazy and unmotivated
today, I either reread an old book, listen to an audiobook or read books under
50 pages. Every finish of a book gives me more energy and love for the next book,
which is why I sometimes read 2 books in a day.
The last law is to make the reward satisfying. Read a book on your
field or on something you want to learn. When you know what you want from a
book, that gives you the satisfaction factor and you end up being happy afterwards
and easily makes you achieve your goals.
4. 4. How to
Break a Bad Habit
Invert all the systems mentioned above.
1st law (Cue): Make it invisible
2nd law (Craving): Make it unattractive
3rd law (Response): Make it difficult
4th law (Reward): Make it unsatisfying
5. 5. Role
of Family and Friends in shaping your Habits
The culture we live in determines which behaviours are attractive to
us. We tend to imitate the habits of 3 social groups: the close (family and
friends), the many (the tribe) and the powerful (those with status and prestige).
Normally, if a behaviour can get us approval, respect and praise, we find it
attractive. It is like cleaning the streets of your hometown and making it a
habit or helping old ladies carry their grocery.
Now think of why our Somali community has less readers? It is
because we are surrounded by social groups who are not giving us the approval,
respect and praise we deserve. To overcome this, we have to join a culture
where we already have something in common with the group. Make friends who are
readers, join book clubs and follow anyone who reads more than you.
6. 6. True
Stories
The book has a lot of true stories of Olympic gold medalist, award
winning artists, business leaders, life-saving physicians and star comedians. To
be better at what you do, study the examples and stories of those who did
before. Somalis say ‘Sadar Muuqda Suaal Ka Dhan’ meaning, what you see before
you or the line in front of you does not need questions to be asked, you see it
for yourself.
7. 7. Habit
Journals
My last and key take away is journals and keeping the progress of habits. Keep a daily journal and think of the happenings of everyday, keep a gratitude journal and remember what you are grateful for each day. Keep a productivity journal and list your most important task every day. Keeping journals shows you the progress of your habits and the system you follow on a daily basis.
I have enjoyed writing these and I hope you take away something from it. Leave a comment and let me know of your thoughts. Do not forget to share with family and friends too. Till our next read, Happy Reading.
Ismile Inspires

This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteShukran brother I appreciate for the good work you r doing thanks for the effort❤️❤️❤️
ReplyDeleteThanks dear brother ismael
ReplyDeleteThanks alot
ReplyDeleteA really comprehensive and well put together Summary or as the author put it of the Atomic Habits.
ReplyDeleteمشا الله keep at it
Thanks khabiir. I have gained a lot from you.
ReplyDelete