Want to build a habit? Great.
Want to kill a habit that has been slowing you down or harming you? Great.
#career #law #eLearning #lawsikho #habits
It all starts with some kind of awareness.
Let’s say it’s a cigarette addiction. How is it going to start? I can speak from personal experience.
Most importantly, it is available on every street corner, and there are big advertisements on the shop front. That takes care of the awareness part.
The smoking of that cigarette was the action/ response, and the high was the reward.
The trigger evolved over time. After a few years of smoking, I began to associate cigarettes with stress or partying. And partying means drinking alcohol and lots of smoking.
I would feel an itch to smoke whenever certain triggers went off in my brain, and I will have to respond to it.
That is how habits work.
Our parents make us aware that we must brush our teeth when we wake up and before we eat breakfast.
Next is motivation. We are told that not brushing our teeth is really bad for health.
The response was brushing every single day before we ate breakfast.
Even the toothpaste includes chemicals that give you a tingling feeling of satisfaction after you brush.
There is a lot you can learn from these two examples.
Once you identify the habits you are interested in developing, all you need to do is figure out each part of the following:
What will trigger the behavior? What is the cue that will set off the craving? This is why a lot of habits are developed around waking up, having lunch, or going to bed - inevitable, powerful triggers.
You can create other triggers, such as stress. Whenever I feel stressed and overwhelmed, I turn to breathing exercises or meditation.
Sometimes you need more mundane triggers, like an alarm.
I had an alarm that went off every day at 8 pm: call an acquaintance and share about ClikLawyer with them.
If the trigger is not reliable or consistent, your efforts will fail, so careful on that front.
If you want to make a habit go away, you need to make the triggers weaker, or more difficult to encounter.
Why could I study for 10 hours a day for law entrance as a 17-year-old kid? It was because I was highly motivated to study law and get through to a good NLU.
You need to build up the craving and keep it going in order to do heavy-lifting, extraordinary work.
I do not have cravings to smoke cigarettes anymore.
The human mind is very powerful, which you can use to increase or reduce the craving for anything you like.
Response
However, it is certain that you need to stick to taking those actions over a long period of time for any habit to become second nature, learned behavior that gets triggered automatically, leading to phenomenal results.
Reward
If you want to build a habit, make sure that there is an obvious reward, and that you stop to enjoy it.
If you want a kid to build a habit, after they take the desired action, you have to reward them. Not so different from training a dog. Carrot and stick.
Also, shorter feedback loops, where you get rewarded faster, works better!
In whatever habit you are trying to build, there should be frequent rewards for it to really work.