Anti-habit: for quitting something, I’ve found that telling myself “wait 5 more minutes” each time I think about it can help reduce and break the habit. If your habit is linked to something else (for example, you always have a cigarette when you have a cup of coffee), this is extra useful. This helps me with not eating junk foods and overcoming a craving—often I forget about it.
If you have a new habit that’s not time-specific and doesn’t take too long, try to do it first thing in the morning. It will not only get done (and be harder to forget), but the feeling of accomplishment can help your state of mind in achieving other tasks throughout the day. For me, lifting weights for the day takes 5 minutes to do a simple workout, but once it’s done I feel like I’ve gotten something significant achieved and that makes me more motivated during the day.
Before I started a family, I went through a period of minimalism, and I had a “magic” wallet (card-sized, flips money across on the inside using elasticised bands, doesn’t fit coins), and only carried that, my phone and keys. I couldn’t collect receipts, lots of store cards, coins, tags or whatever else in it, and it had what I needed (back then).
(separate comments for separate habits, as per the original post)
Anti-habit: for quitting something, I’ve found that telling myself “wait 5 more minutes” each time I think about it can help reduce and break the habit. If your habit is linked to something else (for example, you always have a cigarette when you have a cup of coffee), this is extra useful. This helps me with not eating junk foods and overcoming a craving—often I forget about it.
If you have a new habit that’s not time-specific and doesn’t take too long, try to do it first thing in the morning. It will not only get done (and be harder to forget), but the feeling of accomplishment can help your state of mind in achieving other tasks throughout the day. For me, lifting weights for the day takes 5 minutes to do a simple workout, but once it’s done I feel like I’ve gotten something significant achieved and that makes me more motivated during the day.
Before I started a family, I went through a period of minimalism, and I had a “magic” wallet (card-sized, flips money across on the inside using elasticised bands, doesn’t fit coins), and only carried that, my phone and keys. I couldn’t collect receipts, lots of store cards, coins, tags or whatever else in it, and it had what I needed (back then).
(separate comments for separate habits, as per the original post)