BOOK SUMMARY 52 Better than Before
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Summary written by: Ronni Hendel-Giller
"Perfection may be an impossible goal, but habits
help us to do better. Making headway toward a good habit, doing better than
before, saves us from facing the end of another year with the mournful wish,
once again, that we’d done things differently."1
- Better than Before, page 12
Anyone
who has tried to create a new habit knows that it’s hard. And, habits are at
the heart of change—we change our lives, habit by habit. In Better
Than Before: Mastering the Habits of Our Ordinary Lives, Gretchen Rubin
explores a myriad of strategies and tactics for creating new habits—grounded in
both research and experience. She draws on many of my favorite books and
authors, bringing the best of the research from each of them into an easy to
read and highly relatable book. She add to that some ways of thinking about
habits that, despite all that I’ve read before, feel fresh and new.
The Golden Egg
It’s Not About Self-Control
"In
the end, I concluded that the real key to habits is decision-making—or, more
accurately, the lack of decision making."- Better than Before, page 5
I’m
really, really good at my early morning routine. I keep it, no matter what.
Later in the day, it’s so much tougher for me to do the things that I know I
should do, that I wish were ingrained habits. Better than Before helped
me to crystallize what was different—and what I could do about it.
The
most important thing about my morning routine is that there are no decisions
involved. I don’t have to exert one ounce of self-control. I have a plan, I’ve
made it easy to execute, I do it when I get up, and I do it every day. The
result: I’ve meditated for a minimum of 10 minutes and a maximum of 40 minutes
every day—bar none—for the last three years. The discipline is to continue to
not allow this practice or habit to be a matter of decision. I have no doubt that
as long as I do that, I will continue to practice.
Many
of my other habits do require more self-control because they include some
amount of decision-making. It’s not all about time of day (which I thought) or
diminished willpower (which is true, but not the main point), but more about
designing the environment so that doing (or not doing) what is required to
adopt or maintain a habit requires as little decision making as possible.
Despite
what you’ll read about in GEM #1, this principle—minimizing decision-making—applies
to almost everyone.
Gem #1
Know Yourself
"We
can’t presume that if a habit-formation strategy works for one person, it will
work just as well for anyone else, because people are very different from each
other."- Better than Before, page 13
Better
than Before is chock full of tips and strategies for
habit-formation (see GEM #2 as an example)—but perhaps the biggest GEM is
realizing that any given tip or strategy may not work for you—and that’s ok.
And that few strategies (or habits) are inherently right for a specific person.
Knowing
more about who you are and how you operate is key to figuring out how what
strategies to follow to make habits work for you and what advice to ignore
because it probably won’t—and to feel ok about that. It’s also helpful for
those of us who like nothing more than to give advice to others about how to
establish a habit. We (yes, that’s me) need to accept that what works for us
may not work for others.
Rubin
suggests four basic tendencies in people around habits—you’ll likely identify
with at least one of them. They have to do with how we manage expectations—both
external ones (e.g., work deadlines) and internal ones (e.g., exercising more.)
An Upholder tends to meet both outer and inner expectations,
a Questioner resists outer expectations—but tends to meet
inner ones, an Obliger struggles with inner expectations—but tends
to meet external ones, and the Rebel resists both outer and
inner expectations. Rubin does not suggest that we change our tendency—rather
that we work with it to design strategies for creating and maintaining habits
that will work for us.
She
also provides lots of other categories of distinctions for us to think through
that could influence how we go about forming habits—ranging from whether we are
morning or night people, “marathoners” or “procrastinators”, underbuyers or
overbuyers—and many more. Some of these categories were familiar to me—others
were new. As I thought through habits I wanted to adopt—or stop—these
distinctions stuck and definitely provided new insights.
Gem #2
Create fixed habits
"I’ve
found that it’s actually easier to do something every day than some days."- Better than Before, page 80
Scheduling
is one of the pillars that Gretchen Rubin explores. Foundations (focusing on
what matters most) and monitoring (keeping track of what we are doing) are the
other two pillars. A couple suggestions around scheduling really “popped out”
for me—and might be helpful for you. One was that it’s often easier—and more
powerful –to do something daily than once in a while. What you do every day
really matters—and is possibly easier to build into your routine (reducing
decision-making—remember?)
The
other tip around scheduling that has already made a huge difference for me is
to tie to an existing habit (after my morning coffee) or an external cue (when
my alarm rings,) rather than a specific time of day. I used to do my workout
each morning right after meditation. My schedule shifted due to clients in
another time zone and I found my daily rigor disappearing (I had to make
decisions.) My new scheduling trigger is “the first free 45 minute block in my
day” and, lo and behold, whether that is in the morning, early afternoon or
late afternoon, I’m squeezing in my 45 minutes of exercise.
While
reading Better than Before I found myself making shifts as I
read—thinking about habits I wanted to work on and how I could better address
them. I found myself cataloging what I was doing that I wanted to shift—what I
was proud of and how I was already using these strategies—and where I could be
“better than before” with some minor shifts. If you’re thinking about how to
make lasting changes in your life—through your everyday habits—this is a great
place to start. I highly recommend it!
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