![]() Keep habits to the “two-minute rule.” It can be tempting to go big on your goals, but this also makes them harder to maintain.Conversely, if you get 1% worse each day, the skill will have diminished to almost nothing at the end of a year. Habits are the “compound interest of self-improvement.” If you can get just one percent better at something each day, by the end of a year (365 days) you will be 37 times better.If you are so inclined, please leave us a review! Listen to the episode in the player above or download and enjoy it on Apple Podcasts. You’re less likely to quit on yourself when the decision to change is small and simple. ![]() James refers to this as “the art of showing up.” By practicing the basic decision to “show up” for these activities you can train yourself to overcome your objections and actually start. Getting one percent better can be as simple as reading one page of a book per day or driving all the way to the gym and exercising for only five minutes. 01 365, you end up 37 times better by the time you get to the end of the year.” – James Clear “I like to refer to habits as the compound interest of self-improvement, and the reason why I like that phrase is that, the same way that money multiplies through compound interest, the effects of your habits multiply as you repeat them over time…f you can get just one percent better each day, so. James advocates that the way to build habits is to try and get just one percent better each day – something that sounds almost too easy to do, and yet builds a firm foundation for continual improvement. ![]() Our guest this episode is James Clear author of the instant New York Times bestseller, Atomic Habits, An Easy and Proven Way to Build Good Habits and Break Bad Ones. Sometimes the smallest changes can have a long-lasting impact on your life, especially when those changes become habits. However, every once in a while, I’m reminded that disruption does not have to be earth shattering. Disruption causes your world to shift and change-an earthquake in the making. “Disruption,” as a word, has always had an explosive sound to me. ![]()
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